Sorry for the ambiguity and the lack of pictures but lives are truly at risk.Recently we traveled to a village and met Hmong refugees from Laos and heard their tragic story. The story actually starts in Viet Nam. A large church was meeting for worship and government officials came into the church and sprayed a poisonous chemical. Many people died, some people were able to escape and they went to the hospital for medical treatment. The hospital told them to go home because they could not treat them. There were pregnant women in the church and the police cut the babies from their womb and left the mothers to die. Some of the believers were able to escape from that area and a group traveled to Laos. They found a village with believers in it and settled there. The village people helped build them houses to live in. Two of the Vietnamese refugees went back to Viet Nam to visit family, but were captured and tortured. They gave up the location of the other believers in Laos after many hours to being tortured.
The church in Laos heavily persecuted as well. The villagers did not know that an undercover police officer had infiltrated the church. The undercover police officer burnt down all the Vietnamese refugees homes one evening during a worship service. The Vietnamese and Laotian government worked together to raid this village with the Vietnamese Christians and Laotian Christians and started capturing all the Christian leaders. The police were told that if people tried to escape to shoot them. A total of 17 elders were arrested that night. Prison in Laos is terrible, families have to bring food to prisoners, but the government would not let the families visit the Christians. The cells are small and cement with no bed, no toilet or running water. You have to do your business in the corner of the room you live and sleep. The family we met was not in the village during the raid.
Later, there was a Bible conference planned in another town and Christians from all over Laos were going to attend. The family we met was on their way their when their car broke down and they were two days late. There was a raid on the conference and many people were arrested. This family showed up late and just missed being arrested and thrown in prison. Christians have scattered and escaped to other countries. They continue to share the gospel and plant churches in these new countries they escape to. Their desire is to serve God wherever they are. The family we met was traveling back to home when they were stopped along the way and asked for identification. The government had a list of people they were to arrest. The name on the identification card did not match the name on the wanted list, due to an error on the ID card. They were let go and went to their sisters house where other police questioned them. They lied and told them that they were from another village and they were there to fish. They told us they knew they shouldn’t have lied but they were very scared and didn’t know what to do. They gave the police all the fish that they caught and the police were very happy for the fish so they let them go. They then decided to escape from Laos to Thailand; so they bought plane tickets and drove straight to the airport. They had to go through security and the security officials took them into a different room and started to interrogate them. They were terrified and prayed and prayed; they knew that they needed to be on that plane or the family(mom, dad, and four children) would be arrested. The flight attendant came to the room and told them that they didn’t need to worry about questioning them because the plane was about to take off. The officials let them go and they ran to the plane. As soon as they were seated the plane took off. The Laos government has put a bounty of this man’s head; they accused him of bringing American religion to Laos and smuggling drugs and guns. They will pay one million baht ($30,300) for his capture or death. Keep in mind most Thai people make about twelve thousand baht per month so that’s seven years worth of work in Thailand and Laos is more poor than Thailand. The Laotian government has sent undercover officers and hitmen into Thailand to try and find these Christians. One of their friends was killed during a worship service by a hitman that came from Laos.
Their passport has expired so they are now illegal in Thailand and scared to travel far because of military checkpoints that ask for identification. They are scared to go back to Laos because they will be arrested and thrown in prison and maybe killed. The hardest part of this for them is that their kids don’t have any opportunities for school. They don’t have proper paperwork so they can’t go to school, so their three sons (14, 13, 12) work all day. Together they make 100 baht per day, about 2,500 baht per month. The dad told his sons that being a believer in Christ can be a hard life. The oldest son agreed, but told his dad that he wanted to serve God, whether it was easy or hard. What an amazing testimony. Please pray for these brothers and sisters in Christ. We have no idea what it is like to always be looking over your shoulder; not knowing if you will be thrown in prison or martyred for you faith. Their life is a living picture of
1 Corinthians 15:58--Therefore, my beloved brethren, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your toil is not in vain in the Lord.
One of the guys on the team thought that the Laotian Christians were like a fire that the government was trying to stomp out, but each time they stomped on it, little flames would fly off and start a little fire that started to grow and when the government tried to stomp of that fire, little sparks would fly off and begin to burn. What a great picture of the persecuted church in Viet Nam and Laos and it growing despite persecution.
Pray for:
Wisdom and guidance
Perseverance
Continued faithfulness