| Living and dying for God in a dangerous
world
By Erich Bridges
RICHMOND, Va. (BP)-The bullet that took Martha Myers’ life
came from a weapon disguised as a sick child.
What a bittersweet irony.
Myers, 57, delivered, vaccinated, healed, comforted
and cared for thousands of children during her 24 years
as a physician at the Baptist hospital in Jibla, Yemen.
Her Southern Baptist colleague, hospital administrator
Bill Koehn, made toys for Yemeni kids in his spare
time.
The Yemeni man who got a semiautomatic pistol past
hospital guards Dec. 30 by cradling it like an infant
apparently knew what he was doing: targeting American
Christians. He killed Myers, Koehn and purchasing agent
Kathy Gariety, and wounded pharmacist Don Caswell.
Why he did it -- and whether or not he plotted the
attack alone -- are now subjects of investigation.
But Myers knew what she was doing, too.
She fell in love with the people of Yemen the first
time she visited the impoverished Arab land in 1971
as a young medical worker. “I felt a special
assurance from the Lord that this was where I would
be and, single or not, I would be happy,” she
reflected in a 1994 interview. She returned there as
a career Southern Baptist doctor in 1978 -- and never
looked back.
She was happy, despite the crushing workload and chronic
understaffing at the hospital, the overwhelming physical
needs of the people, the loneliness of endless responsibility.
Between patient rounds, surgeries and emergencies,
she found time to visit countless Yemeni homes, make
countless friends, immunize countless kids and save
countless lives through her pioneering community health
work in isolated Yemeni villages, which she reached
by bouncing a Land Rover down rough roads.
“She had an insatiable compassion for people,
especially people in need,” said her father,
Alabama physician and former state public health director
Ira Myers.
Myers and her fallen co-workers also knew the risks
of working in a place like Yemen, particularly as Islamic
radicalism increased in recent years. She survived
a kidnapping by Muslim militants several years ago
and continued her medical ministry.
“This (gunman) did not take their lives; they
chose to give their lives” to Yemen long ago,
said John Brady, the International Mission Board’s
regional leader for North Africa and the Middle East. “Loving
God, they loved the Yemeni people.”
The Yemeni people who knew them loved them back -
as demonstrated by the outpouring of respect and grief
after their deaths.
“All Jibla weeps for them,” Malka al-Hadhrami,
a long-time friend of Myers told a reporter through
her own tears.
The deaths of Myers and her colleagues follow the
murder of American missionary Bonnie Penner Witherall
by a Muslim gunman in Lebanon in November. Attacks
and threats in other areas raise new questions about
how to protect Americans living and working abroad
in the post-9/11 era.
Students, business people, diplomats, aid workers
and missionaries abroad are what security specialists
call “soft targets” - easy prey for organized
or free-lance terrorists. Missionaries in particular,
by the very nature of their service to local people
and communities, are vulnerable. They don’t work
behind reinforced walls or travel in armed convoys.
Following the deadliest day in 157 years of Southern
Baptist mission work, a somber new year greets the
nearly 5,500 Southern Baptist missionaries working
in more than 180 countries - a new year clouded by
threats of war, terrorism, anti-Christian hostility
and growing global anti-Americanism.
Security precautions have become a higher priority
in missionary training since 9/11, and will take on
even greater urgency as threats increase. Yet, as IMB
President Jerry Rankin stated after the killings, “We
would not choose to end our ministry and service because
of risk and danger to our personnel. If we did, we
would probably be ending our ministry in many countries
throughout the world.”
That’s not going to happen -- unless we succumb
to fear or anger. We need the spirit of Martha Myers,
who remained faithful to God -- and to the Yemeni people.
She loved them because He loves them.
“No prayers are wasted on Yemen and the other
countries, because the needs are so great,” she
once said. “The fields are white unto harvest,
and we need to pray to the Lord of the harvest to send
out folks to help.”
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