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Am I My (International) Brother’s Keeper?
Scanning the caption, I learned that this was Jomo
Kenyatta, once imprisoned as the suspected leader of the notorious Mau Mau terrorists,
but now the president of newly independent Kenya. My acquaintance with the
Mau Mau was limited to newspaper reports, and I’d never set foot in Kenya or
any other African country. But I remembered seeing this striking black face
twenty years before.
Flashback
Suddenly I saw myself as a fearful pre-freshman
at the London School of Economics and Political Science. It was summer vacation,
but as a result of my application to study at the school, I had been called
in for an interview.
I was a new Christian. The depression was making
life hard for everyone so I decided I could help best by becoming a social worker.
At that time L.S.E. was the place to study social work.
As I pushed open the swinging doors of the unimposing
structure squeezed into the heart of downtown London, I could hardly believe
my eyes. A turbaned Indian was thrusting his way out; men of every hue, it
seemed, were passing back and forth in the hallways. There was hardly a female
in sight. I mustered up enough courage to take a timid glance into the library.
A huge, impressive African figure, with a little goateed beard, was striding
between the tables. It was Kenyatta.
I had just graduated from a girls’ school in a
distant residential suburb, where foreigners were largely unknown (except for
an occasional mademoiselle from across the channel who came to teach us French).
True, one year we had a Canadian girl who was a refreshing curiosity, and in
my senior year the Turkish government sent two gentle young ladies to study
with us. But what was I getting myself into now?
It hadn’t occurred to me that while the British
students were on vacation the foreigners were left in London.
Little Did I Know
I never did learn Kenyatta’s name while he was
a student, nor that of V. Krishna Menon, an unforgettable lean and fierce-looking
Indian. But I recognized his face when he became a rising figure in his country’s
government, first as an ambassador to the United Nations and then as minister
of defense. I have since learned that John F. Kennedy and Pierre Trudeau were
there as graduate students, and that while I was there, nearly thirty per cent
of the student body was foreign. Many of them are now in high government positions
in their countries.
If only those of us in the IVCF chapter could have
realized our potential then! We did have a yearly International Students’ Tea
and occasionally invited foreign students to evangelistic meetings. But L.S.E.
was not a residential college, and most of us commuted long distances. Also,
most of the foreign students were graduate students, while we in the Christian
fellowship were humble undergrads. We rarely saw foreigners in our classes.
Undergrad Missionary
On most North American campuses, however, the situation
is different. Your college years are probably the best opportunity you will
ever have to be both a good neighbor and a missionary. If you find entering
a huge university a bewildering, frustrating experience, you can be sure that
foreigners find it ten times more so.
You can begin your “foreign ministry” by simply
keeping an eye out for people who look lost or don’t know their way around the
library. Sit next to them during meals. Learn their names and how to pronounce
them. Some will come from cultures where intimacy, friendship and concern for
anyone outside of the family are rare. So don’t begin with backslapping, but
be helpful and show a sincere interest in them as people.
If you live in a dorm, why not try sharing a room
with a foreign student? A Japanese friend of mine, a colleague at the Tokyo
Christian College, went to Muskingum College in Ohio to study. She knew nothing
about Christianity then, but was one to Christ by her dorm roommate. Now, not
only is she teaching young Japanese men and women who are training for full-time
Christian service, but she is also a member of the city’s Board of Education.
John Sung, the great Chinese evangelist, became a Christian at an American Ivy
League college. I know many other Christians who have found Christ the same
way.
Open Your Home
Yet foreign students often return to their home
countries after four or more years of college without ever having been inside
an American home. I have heard people say that they never met a Christian in
the U.S.! An invitation home for the weekend or for part of a vacation can
mean a lot to a foreign student, and can make a lasting impression.
William Woodward, a veteran missionary to Japan
wrote:
Japanese in the professions and in business and
education are notoriously indifferent to formal religion but… they have a deep
respect for people who live their religion … It is the shame of Western Christianity
that, while much effort is made to spread the Gospel in Japan, very little is
done in the West to enable Japanese visitors or residents to hear and understand
the Gospel of Jesus Christ…
“The answer is for Americans and other Western
peoples to open up their churches, homes and hearts to the stranger in their
midst … The front door of every Christian home in the West is a battleline of
Christendom and a gateway to the evangelization of Japan. Each door should
be open inward in welcome and outward in Christian witness and service.”
The same is true for other nationalities.
Good “Samerican”
Your presence in your college and your approach
to international students may have far-reaching effects. You may influence
some future foreign minister, and thus his policy toward Canada and the U.S.
Or more importantly, you may lead young men and women to see their personal
need of Christ as Savior and later their own country’s great need of him too.
My next-door neighbor in Tokyo was a man in his
country’s diplomatic corps – he was the official representative at the 1964
Olympic games. His wife found Christ while in Japan. When the couple’s tour
of duty was over, the wife wrote and told us that as soon as she arrived in
her own country, she realized that only Christ could relieve it of its poverty.
God may choose to use your friendship with a foreign
student to influence that person’s country. Christian values make a difference
in politics, social justice and government. Foreign students who find Christ
in North America may later sacrifice power and prestige to preach the gospel
and build up believers among their own people.
So, be a good neighbor. Even if you never leave
the United States, Christ may use you to help spread the Word in a country you
never set foot in.
DOROTHY R. PAPE has been a teacher at Bibelschule
Brake in Germany. She is the author of In Search of God’s Ideal Woman.
Copyright Information:
Reprinted from HIS magazine, October 1979 issue.
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