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THE SILENT DEATH

 

 

July & August 2006
A special letter from  Sue Sawka  

The back alleys of African cities can be dismal and dark places that rob people of hope.

I was giving a Zambian pastor a ride home after ministering among the “X-ladies”. That’s the term I use to describe the outreach to women who want to leave or have recently left prostitution. Although we are in Zambia primarily to do Bible translation, I was asked to work with these ladies last year. Since Zambia has one of the highest incidents of AIDS in the world, anyone involved in prostitution is likely infected and needs to be reached with the Good News of Jesus — SOON!.

The pastor was thanking me over and over for coming and talking to the ladies about Jesus. I wasn’t sure exactly why he was so thankful until he started to explain his thoughts to me:

“These prostitute ladies are not being reached. People are not coming and telling them about the Lord. These ladies are dying silently.”

I asked him, “What do you mean they are ‘dying silently’”? He explained that he and those in the neighborhood see these young ladies around. “They do their sex business, and then after some time we don’t see them anymore. When you ask people where they are … their answer is ‘they are dead’. They die silently – no one caring for them.”

I was heartbroken and speechless.

 

Can’t you do anything about the prostitute problem here ?”

 

A very drunk man said the quote above. You know it’s bad when a drunken man asks you to help with the great number of prostitutes.

 

 

 

 

Facts about AIDS:

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Aids in Africa is spread mainly through heterosexual contact.

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Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for 10 percent of the world's population but is home to nearly 70 percent of the world's AIDS cases.

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Every day, some 6,000 people around the world die of AIDS and more people are being infected than ever before.

 

 

Real victories!!

 

 

One of these X-LADIES (former prostitutes) is now living a dream. She always wanted to work with babies and now, because of your help, she is working in an orphanage. She is loving on babies who, like herself, have no mother or father.

 

 

Another lady, a natural leader and very influential, who lived very strong for the devil, is now living even harder for the Lord. Many of the prostitutes have come to prayer meetings just because of her. Your gifts helped us send her to an intense discipleship course that is training her to be an awesome woman of God!!!

 

 

Our newest lady said, “I really want to read so that I can read the Bible!” This statement stirred in my heart. I prayed about it and asked God what we could do to help these ladies learn how to read. The answer came through a Zambian lady, who is now teaching them to read!! They meet three times a week. You are making these classes possible!!!

 

 

Come Home Gifted author, Max Lucado, includes this story in his book No wonder they call Him Savior

 

The small house was simple but adequate. It consisted of one large room on a dusty street. Maria and her daughter, Christina, had done what they could to add color to the gray walls and warmth to the hard dirt floor.

Maria's husband had died when Christina was an infant. And now, fifteen years later, Christina had that rare magic some women have that makes every man feel like a king just by being near them. But it was her spirited curiosity that made her keep the village men at arm's length.

She spoke often of going to the city. She dreamed of trading her dusty neighborhood for exciting avenues and city life. Just the thought of this horrified her mother. Maria was always quick to remind Christina of the harshness of the streets. "People don't know you there. Jobs are scarce and the life is cruel. And besides, if you went there, what would you do for a living?"

Maria knew exactly what Christina would do, or would have to do for a living. That's why her heart broke when she awoke one morning to find her daughter's bed empty. Maria knew immediately where her daughter had gone. She also knew immediately what she must do to find her. She quickly threw some clothes in a bag, gathered up all her money, and ran out of the house.

On her way to the bus stop she entered a drugstore to get one last thing. Pictures. She sat in the photograph booth, closed the curtain, and spent all she could on pictures of herself. With her purse full of small black-and-white photos, she boarded the next bus.

Maria knew Christina had no way of earning money. She also knew that her daughter was too stubborn to give up. When pride meets hunger, a human will do things that were before unthinkable. Knowing this, Maria began her search. Bars, hotels, nightclubs, any place with the reputation for street walkers or prostitutes. She went to them all. And at each place she left her picture--taped on a bathroom mirror, tacked to a hotel bulletin board, fastened to a corner phone booth. And on the back of each photo she wrote a note.

It wasn't too long before both the money and the pictures ran out, and Maria had to go home. The weary mother wept as the bus began its long journey back to her small village.

It was a few weeks later that young Christina descended the hotel stairs. Her young face was tired. Her brown eyes no longer danced with youth but spoke of pain and fear. Her laughter was broken. Her dream had become a nightmare. A thousand times over she had longed to trade these countless beds for her secure pallet. Yet the little village was, in too many ways, too far away.

As she reached the bottom of the stairs, her eyes noticed a familiar face. She looked again, and there on the lobby mirror was a small picture of her mother. Christina's eyes burned and her throat tightened as she walked across the room and removed the small photo. Written on the back was this compelling invitation:

"Whatever you have done, whatever you have become, it doesn't matter. Please come home."

 

She did.

 

Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Jesus

 

 

 

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