Gods plan for devastated Doro

By Tohru Inoue | Sudan and South Sudan in East Africa

Missionaries returned to the South Sudan settlement of Doro, just three months after the compound was destroyed by fighting between armed rival groups.

Doro was home to 22 missionaries and five staff, many of whom worked in the SIM discipleship ministries, secondary school and clinic bringing hope and healing to the refugees living in a nearby camp.

But on Christmas Day last year, tensions that had been slowly mounting over months and years reached boiling point. Long-standing disagreements between refugees on the Sudan-South Sudan border and the host community exploded into violence. The fighting quickly engulfed the SIM compound and the missionaries were forced to spend two days confined on the floor of their compounds as the bullets flew indiscriminately above.

On December 27, two days after the first shots were fired, there was a small break in the fighting and planes were sent in to evacuate all our staff to Nairobi. There the South Sudan team has stayed, trying to recover from their ordeal and praying about what the future might hold.

That process of healing and processing is still going on.

By mid-February, the situation in Doro had calmed down enough to allow a small team to return to assess how bad the damage was.

They found the compound had been looted and much of the property destroyed.
But they heard God’s voice. When they returned, one of the directors said simply: “I believe God is calling us back into Doro to unify the body (of Christ).”

In early March, five mission workers returned to begin the rebuilding process ready for more of us to go back.

By late March, most of the houses had been wired with solar electricity again and there were beds and bedframes ready. The missionaries who wanted to return were back by the end of the month. Even now, I’m not exactly sure why God puts us through these moments of disorientation.

What will the ministry look like going forward? Hard to say exactly. Our team is figuring that out. How will the Lord shape our ministry in the light of the unity and peace this country so desperately longs for, so desperately needs? How will a war-torn country recovering from the 2013 civil war caused by tribal tensions reach unity? How ever would SIM even attempt to fulfil what God has been speaking to our leadership? How will unity come about?

Perhaps in Christ — yes, I do believe it will be in Christ alone.

*Update: As of September, there have been a number of missionaries from the Doro team that have expressed how thankful they are for the generosity of SIM donors who have helped them rebuild their lives and ministries. So from the Doro team to you, "Thank you!"

Please pray:

• that, in this stretching time, we would have the courage to keep listening to God’s promptings and step out, venture away from the safety of the shores and head into the deep waters where he alone can navigate.

• for both host and refugee communities to come to know Christ through the witness of the mission workers in Doro.

• for the Doro compound to be a beacon of hope and peace in an area which has seen so much violence.

SIM Asset Publisher Portlet

Publicador de contenidos

SIM Asset Publisher Portlet

Publicador de contenidos

Related stories

Seven dental therapists graduate in Liberia, marking a milestone for dental care

Just three hours outside Monrovia, seven dedicated students, beaming with pride, celebrated their graduation alongside their teacher, Dr. Simon Stretton-Downes OBE. They are: Matilda, Archie, Daniel, Charles, Ellen, Rebecca and Vestee. After two years of hard work and collaboration, they received their Dental Therapy Practitioner diplomas from Cuttington University in Liberia. This is a significant milestone, marking a life-changing step for these students as they begin their new careers and a pivotal achievement for the country.

A scalpel and a bible

Have you ever wondered what it means to be an outreach surgeon? Through their work, they not only heal bodies but also point to Jesus, the ultimate healer and source of eternal hope. His love and grace sustain them in this work. Dr. Sam Fabiono shares what his role as a surgeon involves and how surgeons like him are transforming lives and guiding others to Jesus in their time of need.