Nigeria’s ECWA Indigenous Missionaries Leave Legacy of Faith

Morning Star News report – Amid ongoing dangers, Christian leaders in Nigeria this month recalled the exemplary faith of indigenous missionaries who gave their lives in areas overrun by Islamic extremist militants.

 While President Muhammadu Buhari told an India-African summit this week that Islamic extremist group Boko Haram has been contained to “sporadic” attacks in remote areas, leaders of the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) told Morning Star News how Nigerian missionaries sent to those areas have suffered.
“These missionaries have been laboring in very dangerous, remote mission fields, far away from modern civilization,” said Elijah Ipole, head of media for the ECWA’s Evangelical Missionary Society (EMS). “Some have had to bury their loved ones while in mission fields. Some have had their properties looted or completely destroyed by the enemies of the gospel.”
Established in 1947 to empower indigenous African missionaries to take over missions work from foreign missionaries in Nigeria, EMS has lost five of its leaders to Boko Haram and other jihadists in the last four years, according to the ECWA president. One of them, the Rev. Isma Dogari, was murdered in Bauchi state in 2011. An EMS report describes his death:
“The Muslims took him to a mosque just by the roadside and, once inside, gave him a Koran and told him to denounce Jesus and live. But he refused and told them, ‘You need Jesus Christ in your lives.’ They then plugged his eyes, brought him out of the mosque, took him under a tree and asked him again to denounce his faith and live, but repeatedly he told them, ‘You need Jesus.’ At this point they stabbed Rev. Isma Dogari with a knife, slaughtered him and burned his corpse.”
The Rev. Bukari Bunga, a director with EMS, told Morning Star News that Pastor Dogari was killed on April 10, 2011, while working in the Muntoshi Station. He was killed in Mararaban Liman Katagun. Other EMS missionaries killed by Muslim jihadists, according to Bunga, were pastor Ezra Ibrahim, killed in his station at Sabon Gida on Sept. 19, 2014; pastor Joshua M. Nana, killed in Bassa village in 2013; pastor Yunana Kinge, killed in Rafin Pa, Zankwa of the ECWA’s mid-central region on June 25, 2012; and pastor Yakubu Wazari, killed at Jos’ main market while taking his son to school on Jan. 8, 2011. He has served in Bani Kauwa II in Kasuwan Magani of the mid-central region.
The EMS’s Ipole said Boko Haram has left much of Nigeria’s northeast uninhabitable.
“Go to northeast Nigeria and see the ruins of what has become of the habitations of our Christian brethren,” he said. “See how Christians have been massacred, and how the few survivors have been maimed, scattered and made refugees in their own motherland.”
ECWA President Jeremiah Gado stated in a letter to churches in Nigeria this month that the EMS missionaries remain in danger.
“Please continue to pray for our missionaries, their families and the converts in the various mission fields, as you continue to bear in mind that the gospel is being preached by these missionaries in increasingly volatile and very deadly crises situations,” he wrote.
At the same time, Gado reaffirmed God’s protection of many workers.
“We thank God, however, that even though we have lost five missionaries over the past five years to Islamic jihadists, most of them have been protected and delivered from attacks,” he wrote. “It is a miracle of God’s grace and protection that the casualty rate is so low in light of the terrible turmoil that our missionaries are passing through.”
Boko Haram, which seeks to impose sharia (Islamic law) throughout Nigeria, has killed more than 17,000 people, according to Amnesty International, including 1,600 in the last four months.
At the India-Africa summit this week, Nigerian President Buhari said the military is tackling terrorism.
“I am pleased to note that though sporadic attacks on soft targets have not stopped, the overall capacity of Boko Haram to hold territory and determine the course of the conflict has been severely degraded,” he said. “If the current positive trends are maintained, we are confident that by the end of this year, we would have succeeded in permanently turning the tide against the Boko Haram insurgents in Nigeria.”

While Boko Haram (translated as “Western education is a sin”) is the moniker residents of Maiduguri, Borno state gave the insurgents, the group calls itself the Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’awati wal-Jihad, translated as “The Congregation of the People of Tradition for Proselytism and Jihad.” It has ties to Al Qaeda, and the United States designated it as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in November 2013.

Christians make up 51.3 percent of Nigeria’s population of 158.2 million, while Muslims account for 45 percent and live mainly in the north, according to Operation World.
If you would like to help persecuted Christians, visit http://morningstarnews.org/resources/aid-agencies/ for a list of organizations that can orient you on how to get involved.  
If you or your organization would like to help enable Morning Star News to continue raising awareness of persecuted Christians worldwide with original-content reporting, please consider collaborating at http://morningstarnews.org/donate/?   
Photo: ECWA Gospel 1 Church in Jos, Plateau state, where bombs were planted on July 12. 
Courtesy: Morning Star News

10 Free Travel Apps Even Non-Tech Road Warriors Will Love

From trip planning to trip sharing, these simple apps will improve any adventure. (Photo: Thinkstock/Sasiistock)

By Jessica Festa/ Jessie on a Journey

I’m not a huge tech person. My friends make fun of me because I still go to a physical bank to cash a check and have never ordered food from my smartphone before. There are a few travel apps, however, that I do find extremely useful and fun to have when I’m traveling or exploring my home of NYC. Along with being entertaining, another requirement I have for any app that makes it to my phone is that it’s free (hey, I’m a budget traveler) as is the case for all the items below.

1. Roadtrippers

When you plan a road trip from NYC to Denver using Roadtrippers, the app will suggest things to see and do based on your preferences. (Photo: Roadtrippers)

If you go on road trips, Roadtrippers simplifies the process by a million — and makes it fun. Choose “Plan A Trip” and enter your starting and ending points to be brought to an interactive map. From there, click the interest icons representing attractions, restaurants, and outdoor fun (among other choices) to be given options along the way. All of these will show up as waypoints on the map. Click the waypoint to learn more about the site, with the option to “Add To Trip.” Once your map is complete, you can share it with your friends. Even if you’re not going on a road trip, you can “Explore The Map” by typing in your destination and choosing your area of interest — cool experiences will pop up for you to plot on the map.

2. Stray Boots

There are a few live walking tour apps — I personally like Kamino (free); however, Stray Boots game-ifies the experience, turning the excursion into a scavenger hunt by embedding trivia, puzzles, and challenges throughout. Many users claim that even in their own neighborhoods they end up making discoveries and learning interesting tidbits of information. While the app is free, you have to buy the individual scavenger hunts, which range from about $2 to $12. A

3. HeyLets

A look at HeyLets (Photo: HeyLets)

I know there are a lot of die-hard Foursquare users out there. I’m not one of them. I had the app for a little while when you used to get free beers and coupons for checking in at places; however, I lost interest over time, finding the app felt and looked a bit dated. HeyLets takes the local, personalized, user-written recommendation idea and raises it to a sleeker new level. Connect to the app via Facebook and it’ll start to get to know you. For me, its first suggestion was the Brooklyn Bridge Wine Bar (it’s like it’s known me forever). You can filter results based on location and interest, as well as sub-interest, such as Music -> Alternative & Acoustic, or Dining Out -> French. Add items to your Wish List by clicking a heart icon to create a fun itinerary.

Related: The Secret Weapon for Finding the Best Burger in a New Place

4. Touchnote

Touchnote allows users to upload their photos into a postcard design, add a caption, and mail it to loved ones as a glossy postcard (greeting cards are available, too), printed in one business day. While the tool is free, you will need to pay for credits to send the postcards. Credit packages range from six cards for $9.95 to 75 for $99.95 (the more you buy, the more you save). A postcard is one credit and a greeting card is two, including the cost of printing and shipping.

5. Tastemade

Don’t think you’re a videographer? Tastemade allows even the most un-skilled content creators to make beautiful videos by telling you step-by-step what to film and for how long. Choose between creating a Quick Take (20 seconds) or Full Scoop (1 minute), and you’ll be given a menu of fonts and soundtracks to set the mood before you take directives. There’s a social community aspect too, as you can follow creators, interact with their content, and share videos on social media. The app is an extension of Tastemade’s video network, which features food and travel shows by tastemakers around the world.

Related: 5 Ways Your Identity Can Be Stolen When You Travel (and How to Avoid it)

6. Tinder

While typically thought of as a dating (and sexing) app, Tinder is actually an excellent app for meeting locals. I recently wrote a (slightly tongue-in-cheek) article for Road Warrior Voices on “ Why Tinder Is The Best Way To Meet People When Your Flight Is Delayed.” A blogger I interviewed for the piece, Alyssa Ramos of My Life’s A Movie, told me this “Tinderella” story:

“I swiped right on *Bob, and he asked if I wanted to grab coffee. I told him I was already two Chardonnays deep at the bar, but he could join me and save me from all the suits staring at me like I was fresh meat. Luckily, I already knew what he looked like, so when I saw him walking up I waved like he was my boyfriend. We carried on the conversation like we’d known each other for years. We still text and Facebook to this very day.”

At the very least, you’ll probably get a good travel story out of it.

7. Tripr

Tripr helps you find other travelers who will be in the same destination as you at the same time; it also compiles friends’ recommendations for that area. (Photo: Tripr)

As a solo traveler, I find this app super handy. Travelers sign up via Facebook before inputting their destination and dates. From there, you can see the profiles of other users who will be in your destination during that time. There’s a Tinder-esque feel as you swipe right on those you’d like to connect with. If there’s a match, you’ll be able to chat within the app. A bonus feature is the capacity to see which of your friends have visited the destination you’re heading to, allowing you to ask them for travel tips and recommendations.

Related: The Best Websites to Learn About Air Travel

8. HelloTel

Thanks to HelloTell you can find other travelers staying in your hotel. Whether that’s creepy or useful, remains to be seen. (Photo: HelloTel)

Another great app for solo travelers, HelloTel is a social network connecting its 150,000+ members at their hotels (and nearby hotels), as it shows other users who have checked in around you. When you post a status update, you have the option to post only to those staying in the same accommodation, or to everyone. While I’m already imagining the pervy messages that will be popping up on this thing, I still think there’s a lot of potential here to make genuine connections. Users can add photos, comment, plan meetups, ask travel questions, and request recommendations.

9. Utrip

The Utrip experience uses your preferences to build a Google map of your trip. (Photo: Utrip)

This fun platform makes planning a tri simple and fun. Enter in your destination and dates — you can set interest preferences now or wait — before choosing your Trip Profile. Choices include Build Your Own, The Backpacker, The First Timer, The Returning Traveler, Utrip Team Picks, and The Luxury Traveler, all written out on cute luggage tag icons. Now, you’ll be given a list of activity suggestions on the right, with the option to modify your personality profile on the left by shifting preference sliders. Maybe you’d like to tell the app that you’re very spontaneous, love extreme adventure, and dislike museums. As you tweak, the suggestions change. Finish by clicking the Plan My Trip button to be given an adjustable itinerary with an attraction-filled Google map.

10. Headspace

If you’re the type that gets stressed and wants to relax on the road — or the type who doesn’t know how to meditate but wants to learn how — this guided meditation app is perfect. The app is free but you’re going to want to make in-app purchases to really make the most of it; otherwise you’re only getting the Level 1 course. Headspace also sells unlimited subscriptions starting at $6.24 per month (with a 30-day money back guarantee). Totally worth it. Along with foundation courses, the app offers an advanced level as well as specialized meditations devoted to Health, Performance, and Relationships.

What apps do you travel with?

WATCH: An Idiot-Proof Guide to an Epic British Pub Crawl

A Classic Yorkshire Pub Crawl, A Broad Abroad

In this episode of A Broad Abroad, on Yahoo Travel, Paula Froelich heads out to experience a classic Yorkshire pub crawl. Find out how after 1 night, 3 towns and 4 pubs later, Paula holds up!

Source – By Yahoo Travel 

Canoes for Peru

In May 2015, the Mount Royal University field school embarked on an epic adventure down the Madre de Dios river in the Peruvian Amazon by way of 15 Canadian-made canoes as part of the Canoes for Peru project. The canoes will now be used by the Huamani family to enhance the spectrum of their ecotourism business and bring an increase of tourism to the smaller villages of Peru.

– By Adventure.com

ISIS Militants Destroy 2,000 Years of Christian Civilization

The terror group ISIS has destroyed 2,000 years of Christian civilization since it became powerful in 2013. PJ Media reports tens of thousands of Assyrian Christians have been forced out of their homes as militants attack their villages; many have died.
A Catholic priest who visited a Christian refugee settlement in Iraq said that the refugees are defeated.
Fr. Andrzej Halemba said, “Without question, we are talking about genocide here. Genocide is not only when the people are killed, but also when the soul of a people is destroyed. And that is what is happening in Iraq now. It is the most tragic thing that I have ever experienced.”
He continued, “I have seen people who have been deeply wounded in their soul. In the various crises in this world I have often seen people who have lost everything. But in Iraq there are Christians who have had to leave everything and take flight three or four times. They can see no light at the end of the tunnel.”
Other refugees fled to Lebanon, after ISIS seized at least 11 of the 33 Assyrian communities in Syria’s Hasakeh province.
Chorbishop Yatron Koliana said that the Assyrian villages are now empty, except a few remaining fighters. Assyrians once numbered about 30,000 in Hasakeh.
“Our people have experienced a great tragedy in Syria,” Koliana said. “They are depressed. Some of them have chronic illnesses. Their lives are difficult.”
50-year-old refugee Simaan said, “The whole world, from the UN to the United States and Russia, is responsible. They (ISIS) have destroyed our whole civilization…and the world is watching.”

Something New Around Cuba – Go to Cuba

“We danced and partied at the infamous Las Parradillas fiesta on Christmas eve, I caught a type of poison ivy from brushing the venemous Guao plant (while trying to get some footage), and we got lost wandering through the old Havana streets meeting fantastic people along the way. If you get the chance to visit Cuba then GO! What a place…

After hearing news of the changing relationship between the Cubans and Americans we decided to grab a flight and travel over the xmas break for a couple of weeks. This is the resulting video…”

– By Adventure.com

It Is Not a Movie, It’s Really Happening: School Teacher Threatens ToFail Student For Not Denying Her Faith in God

“Another child had asked the teacher if we could try to put what we believe on the paper, and she [the teacher] said you can if you want to get it wrong.”

(Katy, TX)—It sounds like it’s right out of the movie “God’s Not Dead”; a teacher telling students that they would fail if they believed that God is not fiction.(Screengrab via Fox News)

According to a Breitbart report, 7th grade “straight-A” student, Jordan Wooley was given an assignment along with her classmates, which maintained that God is a myth and not real.

The students of the reading class at West Memorial Junior High School were reportedly told if their answers disagreed with the assignment’s statements against God, their scores would suffer.

The threat didn’t deter Jordan, however, as she courageously wrote, “There is a God” on her test, even though it would cost her 40 percent of her grade.

The middle schooler later addressed the Katy Independent School District board meeting about the situation, telling them that “another child had asked the teacher if we could try to put what we believe on the paper, and [the teacher] said ‘You can if you want to get it wrong.'” (Screengrab via Breitbart.com)

According to Breitbart: Superintendent Alton Frailey responded to Jordan saying, “I’m truly sorry that you feel that your faith was questioned.

“What’s going on is that the principal was made aware of this today and is going to have a chance to work on that as per district policies and procedures,” he added. “We definitely will look into that. Thank you very much. It was very brave of you. Thank you, honey. Good job.”

Watch a video of Jordan speaking to the school board here.

City Harvest Church in Singapore Stand by Their Pastor after He is Convicted in Court

Christian Headlines report – Even after their pastor received a guilty verdict at his recent trial, members of City Harvest Church in Singapore appear to still be supportive of him.

 The Christian Post reports that City Harvest megachurch Pastor Kong Hee was convicted of misusing more than $35 million in church donations to fund his wife Sun Ho’s popstar career. Kong was convicted along with six other City Harvest members, although they all maintained their innocence throughout the trial.
In a video released by City News, a website affiliated with City Harvest, church members voice their support for their convicted pastor.
VIDEO
“When I first found out about the verdict, I was disappointed,” says one congregant. “But I believe that God has a plan for this church. I have grown up in this church since I was 3, and I believe that this church is a place where everyone can grow up together.”
Yahoo News, however, questions the truthfulness of the sentiments expressed in the video, pointing out that it was released by a website affiliated with City Harvest, so of course it is going to view Pastor Kong favorably.
The Christian Post reports that Kong and his wife founded City Harvest in 1989.
“From the bottom of my heart, thank you so much. Thank you for standing strong in these past five years and five months. Thank you for your steadfast love, belief and encouragement. Thank you for the grace you have shown toward me as your pastor,” Kong wrote on Facebook.
“Thank you for loving me in my spirituality, and also in my imperfect humanity. I want you to know that your prayers for the team and our families have given us wings to ride on in our darkest moments. I love you very much, City Harvest Church,” he added.

Sunday Adelaja Video Message with Derek Schneider

Sunday Adelaja Video Message (Book Review) – In Memory of the Life and Ministry of Dr. Myles Munroe. This book so accurately unravels one of life’s greatest mysteries – the question of life and death!

In this book, “Myles Munroe – Finding Answers to Why Good People Die Tragic and Early Deaths” you will discover:
– Why good people die early
– Reasons and purpose for tragic death
– Why children die prematurely
– How to see death as gain
– Why early death often leads to timeless fame.
– An insight into how to fulfill your purpose on earth and what it
means to die empty.
– A more in-depth understanding into the life and ministry of the late
Dr. Myles Munroe.
– A new passion for life and death.
– How to look death in the face and receive hope for life.
– The bliss that comes after death to the faithful.

CLICK HERE TO BUY THIS BOOK ON AMAZON: http://amzn.com/1908040564

The things you didn’t know you could get for free on a plane

From mounting baggage costs to dwindling on-board amenities, airlines have earned themselves a miserly reputation of late.

However, it may please flyers to know there are still a few free in-flight offerings to be taken up.

1) Free Water

As long as on board supplies will allow for it, flight attendants are usually willing to provide water for parched passengers, said a spokeswoman at UK airline, Virgin Atlantic.

According to the spokeswoman “small bottles of water” will usually be able to be supplied to passengers if they ask for it.

2) Seconds

Most airlines that provide free food will give passengers mid-meal snacks. However, if the small pack of pretzels offered still has you feeling peckish, you can ask for seconds, according to the spokeswoman.

“If there is extra available, cabin crew are usually willing to offer seconds” she added.

3) Cockpit tours

Despite heightened security since 9/11 it is still possible to get a tour of the plane’s cockpit.

“If the plane is on the ground and the pilot has time, they may be able to let children into the cockpit,” said the spokeswoman,” however it is very rare.”

In spite of these offerings, it is true that on-board freebies are still limited.

Most airlines have cut free food for children and also, it seems, the traditional wing pin flight memento. According to the Virgin Atlantic spokeswoman, wing pins are no longer given away to children on their flights and it appears these guidelines also apply to other similar air lines.

It also unlikely passengers will be offered free basic medication on flights. Although airlines do carry emergency first aid kits, it is unlikely that cabin crew would be able to provide passengers with medication such as pain killers.

For those unhappy with their seat arrangement it is also uncertain whether you will able to change seats on your flight. The Virgin Atlantic spokeswoman said: “It’s unlikely, and would be dependent on how much time the cabin crew have to reseat you and how much space is available.”

The Origin of Blond Afros in Melanesia

Pay a visit to Melanesia’s Solomon Islands, 1800 kilometers northeast of Australia, and you’ll notice a striking contrast: about 10% of the dark-skinned islanders sport bright blond afros. Hypotheses about the origins of this golden hair have included bleaching by sun and saltwater, a diet rich in fish, and the genetic legacy of Europeans or Americans. But a new study fingers a random mutation instead, suggesting that blond hair evolved independently at least twice in human history. And other novel genes, including ones with serious health consequences, may await discovery in understudied populations.

Human hair color is a trait usually governed by many genes, but study author Sean Myles, a geneticist at Nova Scotia Agricultural College in Truro, Canada, suspected things might be simpler in the Solomon Islands because he saw almost no variation in shades of blond hair. “It looked pretty obvious to me that it was a real binary trait. You either had blond hair or you didn’t,” says Myles.

To search for an underlying genetic blueprint, Myles and his colleagues collected saliva and hair samples from 1209 Solomon Islanders. Population genetic studies usually compare thousands of individuals, but the researchers predicted they could detect differences in a much smaller sample because of the stark contrast between the islanders’ blond and dark locks. They compared the entire genetic makeup of 43 blond and 42 dark-haired islanders. The two groups, they found, had different versions of a crucial gene, one that coded for a protein involved in pigmentation. Switching one “letter” of genetic code-replacing a “C” with a “T”-meant the difference between dark hair and blond hair. A similar mutation creates blond mice by reducing the melanin content in their fur.

Blond Solomon Islanders carry two copies of this mutant gene, which is present in 26% of the islands’ population, the team will report in tomorrow’s issue of Science. The gene is recessive, which means that blonds inherit it from both parents. The researchers did not find the mutation in DNA samples of 941 individuals from 52 other populations around the world, including European countries. “It’s a great example of convergent evolution, where the same outcome is brought about by completely different means,” says Myles.

The mutation, which has no obvious advantages, likely arose by chance in one individual and drifted to a high frequency in the Solomon Islands because the original population was small, says Jonathan Friedlaender, an anthropologist emeritus at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who was not involved in the study. “This whole area seems to have been populated by very small groups of people making it across these stepping-stone islands, so you do have very dramatic effects in fluctuations of gene frequency.”


The results, says Myles, help deconstruct a Eurocentric view of the world in thinking about where blond hair comes from. He hopes the paper will draw attention to the bigger issue of other novel genes that scientists may be missing by concentrating on the genomes of Europeans. “If you can find a gene for blond hair that exists in Melanesia and nowhere else,” Myles says, “then there’s no reason why those sorts of genes don’t exist all over world in underrepresented populations, and affect not only hair pigmentation, but also disease-related traits.”

“I think it’s a very solid study,” says Rasmus Nielsen, a population geneticist at the University of California, Berkeley. He says the paper makes a strong case for studying diverse populations. “We’re spending millions and millions of dollars to learn a little bit more about the genetic basis of some of the traits that have already been studied in Europeans,” he says. “This study illustrates that there is a lot to be gained in human genetics by looking into small, isolated populations.”

– Report by