Sunday, August 2, 2009

THE GREAT SEARCH FOR THE BADJAO PEOPLE




Apostle Success Kanayo Uchime in Bogo for the Badjao





Apostle Success Kanayo Uchime in Bogo for the Badjao


















Some of the shanty houses the Badjao people in Bogo live in!

Preambles
It was really a great adventure for us here, as we made a very long and desperate search for the Badjao tribal people in the Philippines, a memory that will always linger and linger in us for a very long time. That reminded us how God came down from His heavenly aboard searching for the mere man He had created and put in the Garden of Eden.

We in the Badjao Missionary Team (BMT) (a group of missionaries and evangelists dedicated to reaching the Badjao people wherever they may be found in the Philippines) was very eager more than ever before to locate the Badjao settlement in Daanbantayan, the very north of Cebu province– the people the Lord has mandated us to reach with the love of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Brief Information On The Badjao People
The Badjao people are a nomadic seafaring people, originating from the Samal Tribe, on the island of Mindenao, in the Philippines. The people are notable for spending most or even all of their time on their fishing boats - the reason why they’re often referred to as Sea Gypsies.

They as a result move from one settlement to the other in search of greener pastures. So locating them is often times very tasking and challenging. There settlements are usually shanties and slums that are very far separated from the rest of the people. They’re highly marginalized, abandoned and neglected to say the lest, with no one ready to assist them out of the poverty stricken life they’ve learned to live with.

It needs to be observed that since the early 1970's, the fight for independence has resulted in massive relocation of the Badjao people to other parts of the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia.

But despite all these difficulties in locating the Badjao people, the BMT members took it upon themselves to fish out these Badjao people who’re staying in Daanbantayan. So on Saturday, August 1, 2009, we took off on a missionary journey in order to do a preliminary survey work among these people.

Departure From Our Liloan Base
Leaving our base in Liloan around 5.00 am, we boarded a Ceres Liner bus heading to Daanbantayan and arrived there about 9. 00 am and then we chartered a tricycle to Maya where the Team was reliably informed that the Badjao are.

But to our utmost surprise the people we met in Maya – where there is a little seaport, a usual aboard for the Badjao, informed us that the Badjao had left the place a long time ago. There and then we’re asked to go check them out in Bakhawan, very close to the cemetery - another location in Daanbantayan.

On getting there, we’re told again that the Badjao people are no more there, that they usually show up during major fiestas to beg for arms from visitors and other foreigners. At this point we were already exhausted and weary, but just as King David in the Bible, we encouraged ourselves in the Lord.

Though worn out, we didn’t give up our desperate search for the Badjao. We were so convinced that the Lord was leading us and that we must get a good report back home and based on that conviction; we kept up our search by asking a lot of people. And lo and behold people around informed us that the Badjao can be located in Bogo city – a place we bypassed on our way to Daanbantayan.

The Journey Back To Bogo City
What we did was to muscle up again and traveled back to Bogo city with the next available Ceres Liner and just there beside the bus terminal are the Badjao! The people are not so difficult to identify, mere seeing the shanties and slums will definitely tell you that you’re in the home of the Badjao people.

There and then we breathed a breath of relieve, praising and thanking God for leading us to the “home” of the Badjao and immediately we went into action by walking around the shanties, with the people peeping from their huts to behold these foreigners who’ve come to evade their privacy. Some picked up courage to come out to wave to us – may be we might be the very first black people they’ve seen all their lives.

As our style is we had to ask God to lead us to someone or some people (a seed-family) that’ll receive us and that paid off, at once one of them beckoned on us and ushered us in to his “apartment.” And that is Mr. and Mrs. Pilayo a lovely couple indeed, leaving with some of their grand children and a nephew – Bro. Alex, who we understood is already a Christian.

We rejoiced with him and ministered to the whole family, and willingly they committed themselves to the Lord and were willing to have us come back again for Bible study. There and then we scheduled Thursdays for our follow-up visits, when we’ll hold Bible Studies with the family, with hope that through them we’ll be able to reach out to their other kinsmen.

Our Findings
We discovered that being nomads, the people only retire in the evenings, between 6 pm and 8 pm and that any meaningful ministration there must be within this time frame. We also discovered that this Badjao in Bogo arrived there a long time ago from Alaska Mambaling, somewhere in the south of Cebu, probably as a result of the reclamation work done in the place then.

We further discovered that there present aboard in Bogo City is also a reclaimed area, but what we didn’t know is how long they’ll be allowed to occupy the place, since they’re always ejected from a place when a meaningful development creeps in. And this is one of the greatest dilemmas of the Badjao people, which the government of the Philippines needs to address squarely if the people must be integrated back into the system which they once played an active role.
Your Support!
Our Team can never achieve all these without your very support – prayer, emotional and what’s more financial support! You’re therefore encouraged to send across to us your financial support and to donate online click on this link: www.kmointer.webs.com/giveyourdonation.htm

In Conclusion
We went, we saw, we fought, we conquered and we also returned safely! And we’re able to accomplish these, not because we’re so great, but because our God is so great in us! The Lord loves the Badjao hence He also died for them that they might have life and also have it to its fullest!

Note: Please you’re permitted to republish this article in any media of your choice with proper attributes to the Badjao Missionary Team Philippines. And to learn more about the Team, please visit our website by clicking on this link below and you’ll be right there:
http://sites.google.com/site/badjaomissionaryteam/

By Apostle Success Kanayo Uchime
Kingdom Missions Outreach International Inc.
Websites: http://www.kmointer.webs.com/ and www.seamist.org/uchime
Email: kanayo@seamist.org or kmo4missions@yahoo.com
Tel: +639089857499, +639324712532
Yahoo messenger: successkuchime@yahoo.com

Thursday, July 23, 2009

The God of Missions is the Great God!

The God of Missions is the Great God!
By Apostle Success Kanayo Uchime
Kingdom Missions Outreach International Inc.

I and my family left for Asia and precisely Philippines for our missionary assignment in 2008, and without any close relation here in the Philippines and without any secular job doing, still God has been very faithful to us. He has never allowed us to be overwhelmed by what the devil is doing, but has always been with us once at a time.

Isn't that so great! That we have a God who never fails His people is truly amazing, especially those who’re committed to His service. He has continually filled our mouth with joy and we never lacked anything good, just to say the least.

The Lord Has used so many people to be a blessing to my family here in our mission field of the Philippines in the Southeast Asia. We've been doing our evangelism and other missionary work here without much hassle, just because of His faithfulness to us.

We’ve had so many testimonies here in the Philippines to His glory and the good Lord will continue to strengthen us as we move from one barangay (village) to the other. He has never disappointed us and will NEVER do that just for His name’s sake. The Lord even used us to start an organization here - Kingdom Missions Outreach International Inc. and through it, we've been able to touch several lives here in the Philippines. And to learn more, please visit our website: www.kmointer.webs.com

Even just recently God opened another door for ministry for us, by reminding us of the need for us to reach out to the Badjao people. These are a people who’ve been neglected and abandoned for no fault of theirs. To learn more on how the Lord is using us to reach these people please click this link below: http://sites.google.com/site/badjaomissionaryteam/

He’ll never allow the wolves in this part of Asia to consume us, though He has sent us as sheep among them, but still they CAN NEVER touch one hair of our head!

The Lord has kept opening doors upon doors of favor for us here, so please help us thank Him for all His faithfulness and loving kindness towards us. All that we owe Him is more dedication to the calling He has for us, we’ll NEVER fail our God in Jesus name. Amen!

We encourage you to give towards our mission work in the Philippines and to donate online all you do is to click on this link: www.kmointer.webs.com/giveyourdonation.htm

Success Kanayo Uchime
Kingdom Missions Outreach International Inc. (KMOINTER)
GSM +639089857499, +63 9283901971, +639324712532
Websites: www.kmointer.webs.com or www.seamist.org/uchime

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

REACHING THE BADJAO PEOPLE IN THE PHILIPPINES

REACHING THE BADJAO PEOPLE IN THE PHILIPPINES
By: Success Kanayo Uchime
Kingdom Missions Outreach International Inc.


The Lord Jesus Christ is really doing great things in our ministry here in the Philippines. He has opened our eyes to to see the great need amongst the neglected people of Badjao.

The Badjao people are daily crying out, "Come over and help us," hence the mission needs among the people are enormous just to say the lest. And we had no other option than to respond to this divine vision, having been fully convinced that the Lord wants us to be there.

In actual fact our work started there way back in 2007, when I came here in the Philippines for a kind of survey to "spy the land," and know what the Lord would want me do!

Then, I worked among the Badjao leaving in the Barangay Lo-oc, just at the foot of the Lapulapu bridge, in Mandaue city. Then coming back in 2008 with my whole family (my wife and four kids), the Lord started to remind me of my unfinished assignment among the Badjao.

Then flowing with that anointing, I've to start-off again by setting up what's today known and called, the Badjao Missionary Team (BMT), a ministry under Kingdom Missions Outreach International Inc., and the Lord is using the Team mightily to affect the lives of these forgotten people - the Badjao peoples group!

The question that's often asked is, where is the Badjao village or home land? To this we simply say that the Badjao village is in the southern Philippines, on a little stretch of beach on Sarangani Bay, which is just a few miles south of General Santos.

The Badjao are among the displaced people in the Philippines as a result of wars and the death of their traditional fishing culture. There homelands has been taken away from them and their culture is gradally slipping away.

Badjao means "man of the seas" and by tradition, the people are sea nomads, traveling by boat from one island to the other in search of fishing harvest.

Traditionally, they're a seafaring people originating from the Samal Tribe on the island of Mindanao in the southern Philippines and it needs to be observed that very few people outside of Badjao speak their tribal language.

They spend most, even all of their time on their boats, thus they're often referred to as Sea Gypsies, which is however a loose description given to many unrelated ethnic groups. For example the Badjao isn't related to the Mogen People or the Sea Gypsies of Surin Island, Thailand.

The Badjao people are mainly Moslem, the main religion in Mindanao and their families earn their living almost exclusively from fishing, diving for pearls and harvesting sea products. Some Badjao families have 10-12 children, thereby making poverty inevitable for them.

When the Badjao came to Mindanao's southern coast several centuries ago they built bamboo and nipa huts about three meters above the water level stretching to the sea and these high structures were meant to prevent them during high tides and also for safety against strangers.

The Badjao's long journey for safer environment started in the1970s, at the time when the Moro secessionist’s war was raging. They thereby headed north reaching Manila Bay in the 1990s and a group of Badjao built a village along the shore, this time not with bamboos and nipa again but with wood scraps, rice sacks and cartons.

They are regarded as war refugees; this is so because over the past several years, they've been caught in several crossfire’s between the Muslim separatists and the Christian-backed government in Manila. Economically, they've been victims of over fishing by other groups that are using everything from dynamite to high-tech fishing trawlers.

At present the Badjao have reached as far north of Manila and even beyond and many have become land dwellers, making their living by begging for arms in major cities like Manila, Cebu and many others.

For more information about the Badjao, you can visit the Badjao Missionary Team website by clicking on this link below: http://sites.google.com/site/badjaomissionaryteam/

And to support this our project, you can do so by donating online now by clicking on this link: www.kmointer.webs.com/giveyourdonation.htm

May God bless you as you respond to our clarion call for support!

Yours In Missions,
Apostle Success Kanayo Uchime
Kingdom Missions Outreach International Inc.
+63 9089857499, +63 9283901971, +63 9324712532
www.kmointer.webs.com or www.seamist.org/uchime