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Boris at his birth home
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Bride and Groom at ZAKS
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Children's Ministry Seminar
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Harold and Rosa
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Larisa, Matt Anatoli and Peter outside
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Laurie with her sled
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Laurie with the reindeer
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Nenets Group
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Planning for Summer Camp 2008
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Wedding Guests
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Wedding Party
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Zhenya carrying his share
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Click image to enlarge.
From: Donald Marsden
Date: 11/8/2007 10:00:02 AM
To: 'Grace Fishel'
Subject: Siberia Unreached Peoples November 2007
Dear Grace,
On Tuesday, October 23 Laurie and I boarded a train in Moscow for the
two day ride to Labitnange, the town just two miles across the River Ob
from our destination of Salekhard. I am thrilled that after ten years
living in Moscow Laurie was able to join me on a trip to Siberia.
Jeremiah stayed with friends from school here in Moscow.
Peter Khudi, a leader of the Nenets ministry in Salekhard, and Matt
Honig, an American who recently arrived here with his family to work on
the translation of the Bible into the Khant language, met us Thursday
night, October 25 at the train station in Kharp, a small town in the
Ural mountains just a half an hour's drive from Labitnange. Driving to
Labitnange in Peter's Toyota pick-up, we floated on a barge across the
river to Salekhard because there is no bridge across the Ob.
Laurie and I stayed with Matt, his wife Shelby and their three children
Micah (8), Keegan (5) and Cora (3). This very energetic family lives in
a compact three room apartment, and they are in the process of adopting
two boys from Ukraine, but they gave one of their rooms to Laurie and
me. They are the only Americans living in Salekhard.
Laurie stayed four days in Salekhard. We arrived in time to witness the
wedding of Lyudmila Rusmilenko, a Christian from the Khant people and
her bridegroom Zhenya - an Estonian Christian of Russian Jewish
background. What a beautiful event! The first part of the wedding took
place on Saturday afternoon at the municipal building called by the
Russians "ZAKS" (read 'Justice of the Peace'). The civil ceremony was
followed a few hours later by a Christian wedding service at the Good
News Church building, which is still under construction. After the
ceremony the sanctuary was transformed into a banquet hall. We shared a
meal, sang songs, and played tricks on the bride and groom (including
one in which three disguised men were offered to the bride as potential
husbands). To our shock the wedding cake was auctioned off piece by
piece at very high prices. We later learned it is a tradition at Russian
weddings to play some game in which money is given to the bride and
groom. At the close of the wedding a group of us were invited to pray,
each in his native language. The languages represented at the wedding
included Russian, English, Finnish, Khant, Nenets, Ukrainian, Hebrew and
Korean. The wedding celebration continued Sunday afternoon at 4 PM with
another, smaller group fellowship meal and singing.
Lyuda helped us back in the summer of 2006 when I traveled with the New
Wilmington Missionary Conference summer service team to the village of
Shurishkari where we conducted a Vacation Bible School program. In the
fall of 2006 she wrote to me that she was going to Estonia to study
theology. I feared that she, like so many young people who leave Russia
to study abroad, would be lost and gone forever. But she is not. Not
only did she return for her wedding, but she brought with her a
wonderful groom, now her husband, who is just thrilled about beginning
missionary work among Lyuda's native Khant people. Lyuda and Zhenya had
their honeymoon in the pastor's office at the church in Salekhard which
is almost finished now. They planned to fly by helicopter last Sunday to
Lyuda's native village of Lapkhari, which has about 700 residents, but
the flight was delayed till Monday because of a blizzard (we don't know
whether they have gotten out there yet) . They will be starting a church
among Khant people and working on translating the Bible into the Khant
language.
On Monday morning Laurie flew back to Moscow. Since I have not been
there for a year and a half, I stayed on in Salekhard for another week
to renew contacts and to plan for future work. My desire is to help the
church in Salekhard in their work of preaching the gospel among the
native peoples of the region. Toward that end, I spent a few hours each
day last week working on learning the basics of the Nenets language. I
had five days of conversational language learning with Rosa Yar, who is
pictured here with Harold Kurtz in a photo taken two years ago. She let
me set my own learning goals, choosing the things I would like to learn
to say, and we created a small dialogue in which I talked about my
family, where I live, how I am learning to speak Nenets, etc. At the
very least I have mastered the Nenets phrase "I don't understand." I am
pleased that I have started and that at fifty years of age I still have
the capacity to begin learning a new language. It is not much, but at
least the precedent has been set and I have found a person who is
willing to sit with me and let me repeat the phrases I need to learn so
that I can get a basic conversational handle on the language before I
can go out and spend time with Nenets people outside the city on the
tundra. Peter Khudi has invited me to go out and spend a month or two on
the tundra where I will hear nothing but Nenets. That is not realistic
any time soon, but a week might be possible even this winter. My plan in
the future is to continue with language learning.
In addition to the language lessons, I spent a quite a bit of time
talking with Anatoli Marechev, the pastor of the Good News Church in
Salekhard, catching up on the work they are doing with the native
peoples here. One of the biggest limiting factors is their ability to
get a missionary to live out in the villages. They have sent teams to
visit and preach in the villages or to conduct camps like the one we did
in the summer of 2006, but they can't keep anything up after the camps
unless there is a missionary in the village permanently. At this time
they have permanent missionaries in only two or three villages. The
problem is both finding financial support as well as actually getting
people to stay there, because few people can hold out long up here in
the rude conditions of the villages in the extreme north.
The Salekhard congregation is now meeting in the building they have been
constructing. It is almost complete, and as I understand the building
work has drained their energy, but not taken away their vision to reach
out to the native peoples. It is a good home base and they have a
wonderful warm hearted congregation. Anatoli tells me he is tired of
building the church, but as senior pastor he cannot get away from it. He
needs to see it through. Still, I am amazed at how much he put himself
out to help us and help anyone. Anatoli is shown dressed as the
"reindeer herder" at the museum of native culture in the nearby village
of Gornoknyavsk which we visited with him.
On Thursday night I stayed at the church to meet with the Nenets small
group. They met to read the Gospel of Mark, which has now been
translated and gone through several stages of the editing process. Work
on the translation of the Bible in the Nenets language continues. Eun
Sub Song is a South Korean missionary who is leading the work of
translating the Bible. She gives of herself very sacrificially in every
way. Frequently Nenets people, clothes strongly smelling of reindeer,
coming out of the tundra to take care of some business in Salekhard,
call asking to stay in her apartment for days or even weeks. She will
not turn them away. Every morning, except Sunday, from 5 AM till 7 AM a
small group of Nenets women gather at her apartment for prayer. Bible
translation work begins by 8 AM. She is pictured here at the far right
with the Nenets group in Salekhard. Second from the left is Peter Khudi.
The work with the Khant people has taken a turn for the better and
rather rapidly. As mentioned above, Matt Honig has arrived to work on
the Bible translation through Pioneer Bible translators. Small Khant
churches or groups have been started in one or two villages. Boris
Ruskalamov, a native Khant whose ancestors were shamans leads a Khant
home church in the village of Vilposel. (See the photo of Boris in front
of his birth home, which was isolated from other houses in the village,
because the shaman's family had to live separately from others.) Lyuda
and Zhenya, also mentioned above will start work in Lapkhari. We also
met a Finnish Pentecostal woman named Tina who has been living in the
Khant village of Abgort in the region where she has been gathering
people and preaching the word.
Larisa Zhukova from Narnia Center in Moscow joined me on Thursday night.
She helped me conduct a seminar on children's and youth ministry and to
plan for a summer camp next summer in which a group from First
Presbyterian Church in Harrisonburg, Virginia plans to participate.
Our departure from Salekhard was threatened by a blizzard that began
Sunday morning. Because of high winds, snow and lack of visibility, all
flights were cancelled and the ferry barges across the Ob River were
shut down all day. Our friends in Salekhard told us they would be
delighted to have us be stranded with them for a while longer. But
Monday morning the ferry was running again in spite of the high winds
and snow, and we floated back across the turbid Ob to make it to our
train a full fifteen minutes before departure.
I am hoping to make another trip to Salekhard in the winter when the
rivers and swamps are frozen, when we can travel out to the tundra and
the villages. We need to get out to the villages to follow up with
visits to the people we worked with in the summer of 2006 and to invite
children to the summer camp we are planning.
Laurie and I have been encouraged by the gifts and pledges many of you
have made to support us in our future work through Presbyterian Frontier
Fellowship. If you have been considering making a pledge, but have not
done so, now would be a great time to do so. This will help me to a
better degree predict how much support I still need to raise. You can do
this by sending your pledge to Presbyterian Frontier Fellowship at 7132
Portland Ave, Suite 136, Richfield, MN 55423, attn. Shelley Sheunke or
by calling at 1 800 720 4733 or writing to info@pff.net. If you have
been wondering about when to start sending support, we ask you to do so
any time after January 1, 2008 but at least by the beginning of April.
My work with PFF will begin officially on June 1, 2008.
In the grace and peace of the Lord,
Donald Marsden
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