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December 31, 2004
Missionaries in Indonesia urge strong Christian
response to quake
A UMNS Report
By Jan Snider
United Methodist missionaries Don and Ramona Turman watched the words
crawl across their TV screen in Jakarta: "Indonesia Menangis."
Translation: "Indonesia is crying."
The Indonesian island of Sumatra was near the epicenter of the Dec.
26 undersea earthquake that sent tidal waves crashing into 12 countries
around the Indian Ocean. The waves killed at least 117,000 people and
washed away entire villages.
The Turmans offered words of assurance in an open letter to family
and friends.
"We want you to know that we are safe, and that none of the effects
of the devastating earthquake and tidal waves reached the island of Java
and the city of Jakarta," they wrote.
The Turmans are closer to the tragedy than most of the church's
missionaries. "The United Methodist Church has no missionaries in the
coastal areas or islands devastated by the tidal waves," said Elliott
Wright, information officer for the denomination's Board of Global
Ministries.
"Some of our church family have relatives who have perished or are
missing," the Turmans wrote. "Others can tell of miraculous escapes. It
is a time of desperation for all of the people in the affected areas,
and the Christians represent a tiny minority in the midst of a very
conservative majority religion. We pray that a strong Christian witness
will be evident through the outpouring of beneficial aid from around the
world."
Indonesia has the world's largest Muslim population. The country is
also ethnically diverse, with more than 300 local languages.
The Turmans say that Indonesians are uniting in their response to the
catastrophe with donations of money and materials.
Indonesia has suffered economically and politically in the past few
years, in part because of inter-ethnic and religious conflicts but also
from natural disasters, such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
Bishop Joel N. Martinez, president of the Board of Global Ministries,
echoed the Turmans' hope for a strong response from the Christian
community.
"I am sure that our gifts will be offered generously to provide
ministries of healing, relief and reconstruction," Martinez said Dec.
30. "United Methodists have always responded in times of crises, and the
General Board of Global Ministries and the United Methodist Committee on
Relief will lead our United Methodist people in responding to this
terrible tragedy."
Donations to UMCOR's "South Asia Emergency" relief efforts can be
placed in local church offering plates or sent directly to UMCOR, 475
Riverside Drive, Room 330, New York, NY 10115. Designate checks for
UMCOR Advance #274305 and "South Asia Emergency." Online donations can
be made by going to
www.methodistrelief.org. Those making
credit-card donations can call toll-free 1-800-554-8583.
Jan Snider is a freelance producer for United Methodist News Service
in Nashville, Tenn.
Related resources are available online at
http://umns.umc.org.
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