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The World at Our Door
What would you do if you met a future president of a rich African
nation? Bow before him? Stammer? Try to introduce him to the governor?
If you're Terrell Smith, an InterVarsity international student
specialist in Madison, Wisconsin, you invite him over to play the table game
Jenga with your kids.
Really?
Yes, really.
For Smith and other international student specialists around
the country, playing table games, sharing a meal, going to a movie, explaining
the idiosyncrasies of English, helping with a move or just going out for a Coke
are all ways of relating to international students. It's called "friendship."
And, future president-of-one's-country or not, every international student studying in the United
States could use a friend.
According to Fred Wagner, an InterVarsity international student
specialist in Portland, Oregon, the number of internationals on campuses has
mushroomed in the last four decades. "In 1956, there were 30,000 students, and
in 10 years, it doubled," he explains. "In the next decade, that number doubled.
And in the next decade, it doubled again. It's the fastest-growing segment of
the college population. Today, there are over 600,000 internationals on campus."
Many of these students are their countries "cream of the crop."
In contrast to that almost blasé disregard many Americans hold for a
college education, these students and their homelands honor it as a precious
and valuable commodity. Students from foreign countries who come to the U.S.
to study frequently return home to high-ranking careers in government, education,
the military, foreign service and industry.
But for now, they are students. And like all students, they
have some very specific needs. That's where ministry "rubber" meets the international
"road" for InterVarsity.
"It represents a group like InterVarsity with a golden opportunity
to step into the breach and attempt to meet some of the most basic needs that
all human being share," Wagner elaborates. "And they have very practical physical
needs. They need to get oriented and figure out how the city works. They need
to know how the university works. What we're attempting to do is address the
physical, social and spiritual needs of these international students."
Serving the lonely in Portland
Wagner notes that at Portland State University, a commuter
school, the campus becomes a virtual international "ghetto" on weekends. That
makes it very difficult for the 800 internationals left behind to make friends
and socialize with those who could most help them acclimate to American culture.
"It's a very lonely existence for people who have uprooted
and come here, cut off from their natural friendship networks, their families
and all symbols of cultural familiarity," Wagner reflects.
Most people would expect the university to help these students
acclimate. But many higher education institutions have had to cut back on student
services due to budget constraints. At Portland State, this situation opened
a door for Wagner and InterVarsity.
Budget cuts left the international student office without the
ability to address any but the most basic needs of the many internationals on
campus. "So we took the time to establish and build healthy relationships with
the university and the international student office," Wagner says. "It got to
the point where they gave me an office in their office. We're there two hours
a day to serve the students. We offer one-stop-shopping."
In a situation like this, everyone comes out a winner. The
university provides Wagner with office space, referrals and a telephone receptionist
to take messages. Wagner steps into the university's garb by serving the students.
He picks them up at the airport, helps them find off-campus housing and orients
them to Portland.
Together, the university and InterVarsity co-sponsor a "Welcome
to Portland" dinner each fall for about 300 students. While he admits he needs
to exercise tact and good judgment, Wagner points out that so far he's been
able to have a Christian keynote speaker each year. "They've been able to refer
to their faith and yet do it in a sensitive and caring way that articulates
our motivation as a group of Christians to reach those who are strangers."
Introducing ... Jesus Christ!
Practical considerations like these serve to open the door
to friendships with internationals. Many times, these friendships lead to an
in-depth examination of God's Word through Bible study.
Love for these strangers prompted Ellie Laehn to join InterVarsity
as an international student specialist at North Carolina State University in
Raleigh in the early 1990s. In her first two years she worked hard to get to
know the internationals on her campus and train students to lead effective international
Bible studies (IBS).
Laehn's IBS student leadership team at that point consisted
of five students claiming Germany, Malaysia or the U.S. as home. They coordinated
Bible studies, a Friday-evening meeting and follow-up for the group. Volunteers
staffed some of the international Bible studies. These studies tended to be
small and intimate, giving those attending a chance to get to know each other
well and ask all the questions they want.
One volunteer-led bible study brought together two Korean women
who wanted to bring along a friend "just to listen in." The Friday-night meeting,
also volunteer-led, focused on bringing internationals who want to ask questions
... "and get real answers."
Laehn herself met weekly with a young married woman from India,
outside the auspices of the Bible study group. As her conversation partner,
Laehn helped this woman perfect and expand her English. "Through our casual
times of talking, my friend has asked questions that have opened doors for me
to tell her about Jesus," Laehn said. "In the spring we talked about why Christians
celebrate Easter. It is a joy and privilege to tell someone who has never before
heard about Jesus.
"I'm excited to see international students coming to our Bible
studies and asking sincere questions," Laehn continued. "Several are very interested
in learning more about Christianity and are asking hard questions. As members
of the IBS befriend these internationals, they are being "loved" to Jesus."
Muslims in the Midwest
Befriending internationals means seizing a unique opportunity
in their lives. Many international students come from countries which are closed
to the gospel. This means that their time as students in the U.S. may be their
only chance to hear about Jesus Christ. Terrell Smith pointed out that 14 percent
of the international students in the U.W. came from Muslim countries, many of
which do not allow Christian missionaries.
To facilitate Muslim-Christian dialogue, Smith partnered one
year with Muslim student leaders at five Midwest campuses. Speakers from both
backgrounds each took 25 minutes to respond to topics like "Jesus in the Quran
and the Bible" and "Religion and Science, Truth and Civilization." The floor
was then opened up for questions, which often went on for two hours or more.
More than 1,500 students attended these dialogues. Over 350
New Testaments and Gospels, as well as other types of Christian literature,
were distributed to Muslim students.
As a result of this, Smith saw Muslims open up to Christ at
the University of Wisconsin. After the UW Christian-Muslim dialogue, one speaker
asked him for a modern translation of the Bible, saying he wanted to understand
it. Several Muslim students wanted more information about the Bible. One night,
Smith found himself at a table, drinking Turkish tea with several of these students.
They talked about the Bible for more than four hours, examining what Jesus said
about holiness, forgiveness of sins and his own role as Savior.
One student asked Smith if he had confidence in Christ. When
Smith said that he did, the student replied sadly, "We Muslims have no security
of salvation."
A home away from home
For international students, American holidays can be the loneliest
times of the year. That's why Christians reaching out to internationals can
make many new friendships during those times. Each Christmas, InterVarsity hosts
international "houseparties" at camps around the country. Guests get a chance
to ski, hike, relax and just wind down from the stress of school. At the same
time, through simple "sing-along" worship times and conversations with Christian
staff workers, they can begin to understand just who Jesus is and what he can
be to them.
During the school year, some InterVarsity international specialists
coordinate monthly international dinners. After a potluck dinner (often consisting
of dishes from several different nations), students talk about Jesus in small-group
Bible discussions. The dinners promote mutual understanding and respect. But
they also get international students out of the "student ghetto" and into real
American homes. There they interact with Americans of all ages and really see
how U.S. citizens live. And even in a foreign environment, they are offered
a home away from home.
This explains why Terrell Smith invited his African friend
to play Jenga with his kids. Smith met "Emmanuel" through the student's involvement
with InterVarsity's UW Madison graduate chapter. After striking up a friendship,
Emmanuel began to spend time with Smith's family.
Eventually, Emmanuel confided his plans to one day become president
of his home country. "My first reaction was "Yeah, sure," Smith remembers sheepishly.
"But then I realized that it could really happen." Not only had Emmanuel's father
already run for president once, but he was one of the country's top generals and a member of a ruling tribe there. Emmanuel's high hopes had true substance,
and he was giving them wings with his education, a realistic plan and a method
of achieving his goals.
Needless to say, Smith was honored by the realization that
a possible future president of a powerful African country was playing with his
children. By obeying Jesus' command to love the stranger, Smith had a chance
to influence that country's future.
You never know how God may use these friends in politics and
government," Smith marvels. "But these are normal people who like to do normal
things. They are looking for friendship and love. And we're called to love the
strangers in our midst."
All 600,000 of them.
Copyright Information:
This article is reprinted, with revisions and updating, from the Fall 1994 issue of InterVarsity magazine.
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