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They were kidnapped and
imprisoned by the Taliban for 105 days. But what the
Taliban could not do was break their faith in God nor
destroy their hope.
Mar. 28, 2010:
They were kidnapped and imprisoned by the Taliban
for 105 days. But what the Taliban could not do was
break their faith in God nor destroy their hope.
Eight Western humanitarian workers were held by the
Taliban in Afghanistan on trumped up charges of
proselytizing in the days leading up to the 9/11
terrorist attacks and remained imprisoned through the
early U.S. bombings of Afghanistan.
The book Kabul24, released last fall, captures the
harrowing tale of the workers’ experience in prison, the
“angels” they met along the way, and their compassion
toward the Taliban and the Afghan people.
“I feel like this (the story) is a testimony of God’s
faithfulness to people called into places that are risky
and people who respond to that call to go to the places
that most people wouldn’t go,” said Henry O. Arnold,
co-author of the book Kabul24 and producer of the
documentary version of the story, in an interview last
week.
Arnold pointed to Georg Taubmann, international director
of Shelter Now International (SNI), who had lived in
Afghanistan with his wife and two teenage sons for
nearly two decades before he was imprisoned.
“They were willing not only to listen, to hear, but to
go,” said Arnold. “That’s inspiring to me. That touches
my heart. And I want people to know about that.”
In 2001, Taliban forces captured Western SNI aid workers
and 16 Afghan SNI staffs.
During their 105 days in prison, the Western SNI workers
lived in squalid prisons – some reminiscent of medieval
dungeons – and daily feared that they would be killed by
their captors or accidentally by a bomb dropped by their
own government.
The story is mostly told through the memories of
Taubmann, but also splices in stories from the women
workers who were imprisoned separately from the men.
Both the female and male SNI workers shared about how
they read their Bibles and prayed daily. One female
worker explained the trinity to a Taliban soldier when
he accused Christians of being polytheists. Her precise
and understandable answer prompted the Muslim man, who
was part of the interrogation team, to ask her earnestly
if God is real.
During their time in prison, the two Christian male
workers gained the respect of Muslim inmates and some
Taliban because of their piety – Taubmann fasted every
Friday, the Muslim holy day, and was often seen praying
or reading his Bible – and for their deep knowledge and
respect for the Afghan culture. Taubmann speaks fluent
Pashto and wears clothes similar to other Afghan men.
While Kabul24 portrays some of the hardline Taliban
leaders as violent and cruel, it also included stories
of Talibans who sympathized with the Christian workers
and risked their lives to help them. One particular
Taliban, dubbed the “Afghan Angel” by the Western
workers, even collaborated with U.S. forces to ensure
the workers’ safety.
“Here, a Muslim, a member of the Taliban who was
supposed to be his enemy, was risking his life to help
them, a wonderful reminder that God could be much more
than anyone could imagine,” the book records Taubmann
thinking after the “Afghan Angel” smuggled a GPS into
the country to help U.S. forces locate the hostages’
coordinates.
Many Muslims also demonstrated profound love and
compassion toward the Christian workers during their
imprisonment.
The 16 Afghan SNI workers were all Muslims – SNI does
not require their local workers to convert for
employment. Despite being tortured terribly, the Afghan
workers refused to falsely confess that their Christian
SNI leaders had forced them to convert.
Taliban leaders had tried to torture the Muslim workers
to draw out such a confession to be used as evidence
against the Western SNI workers.
“These innocent, faithful Muslim employees stood in the
gap for their Christian friends; they endured the
torture that might have fallen to the Westerners,” the
authors of Kabul24 commented. “It was a sacrifice Georg
and Peter could not comprehend.”
After 105 days of being shipped from one prison to
another, the Western workers were finally rescued by
U.S. forces just before the Taliban recaptured the city
they were held in. The 16 Afghan workers were also able
to escape after a locksmith who was an inmate set
everyone free in the prison.
Six months after their release, several SNI workers
returned to Afghanistan to again serve the country’s
needy people. Among those who returned were Taubmann and
his family. When the SNI workers returned to Kabul, they
found that most of the tribal leaders and Afghan
government officials welcomed them with open arms.
“It’s these under-the-radar humanitarian organizations
like Shelter Now that don’t get the headline but they
are the ones who are doing the ground work of
reconciliation between people and serving the
underserved,” said Kabul24 co-author Henry Arnold. “At
some point, we as a military will go away and we need to
leave it a better place than it was.”
The new SNI team was able to rebuild everything that was
destroyed by the Taliban during their capture. To this
day Shelter Now is still serving the poor in
Afghanistan. Michelle A. Vu, Christian Post Reporter.
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