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AHMED'S
STORY
“Are you
sure you understand?” the doctor asked. “Do you really
want to follow Jesus?” The doctor knew that men from
"Ahmed’s" country rarely became Christians.
Weeks before, the head nurse in the ICU had chided Ahmed,
“How can you not believe in Jesus? Don’t you see how
much these Christians love you?”
Raised on
Violence
Love wasn't in Ahmed’s vocabulary. Though he was 35 years
old, a husband and a father, he had known little of love.
And he knew nothing of the loving God that the Christians at
this hospital spoke of. 
He had grown up in a
“closed country”—Jesus’ Gospel was disallowed, and
it was violently repressed on a case-by-case basis.
He was raised in a
“violent country”—AK 47’s were available for
purchase on the street. Semi-automatic weapons were used
liberally to settle local matters - just and unjust. Death
and anger were the language he had known.
At age 35, Ahmed found
himself separated from his family, huddled in a refugee camp
on the Kenyan border, with a grotesque ulcerating mass
eating away at his face. He kept his face covered 24 hours a
day – both to hide his shame and to keep away the swarm of
flies that seemed to be irresistibly drawn to the horrible
growth on his face.
Alone, unable to eat and
wasting away in the refugee camp, he was seemingly forgotten
by both man and God.
Love and Hope at Kijabe
In desperation Ahmed accepted a visiting doctor’s offer of
help. Carried to Kijabe
Hospital, he emerged from surgery with the ugly half of
his jaw removed. Surgery followed surgery as the doctors
prepared to one-day reconstruct the missing half of his
face. Hope began to grow in his heart.
Since Ahmed couldn’t talk,
he had plenty of time to look and listen. It amazed him that
so many people cared for him. They cleaned his wounds,
changed his dressings, and fed him. They knew he had no
money. They weren’t from his tribe, family or religion.
They didn’t even speak his language. But their touch and
attention gave him hope.
As he observed them, he
began to understand that God was a God of love. This was not
what he learned as a boy, but He
could see it in their faces and feel it in their hands. Now,
two and a half months after arriving at the hospital, one
last surgery revealed that the cancer had returned with a
vengeance. Facing death, he was ready to respond to God’s
love.
God Made Him Whole
He listened one more time as
they told him about Jesus. The doctor asked him, “Are you
sure you understand? Do you really want to follow Jesus . .
. ?”
“Yes, I am sure,” Ahmed
answered.
Three days later his body
gave out. He fell asleep, and he left his ‘old’ body
with us at the hospital. Ahmed awoke in his Father’s
house, with a new face and a new body, free of blemishes.
One hundred days in the hospital, and we couldn’t fix his
body. But God made him whole.
In the 1960’s, SIM was
one of multiple missions working in Ahmed’s country, with
almost 100 SIM missionaries working there. Since 1974,
Christians have not been tolerated in that country. But God
keeps his own windows open. Today, 30% of Kijabe’s
inpatients are Ahmed’s countrymen. Like Ahmed, they see,
feel, and hear Jesus’ good news daily. They cannot escape
it in the faces, hands and words of the Kenyan church at
Kijabe.
For
enquiries or more information, please contact us at webmaster@sim.org.za
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