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May 2007 Issue
Day
of Prayer and Fasting for World Evangelization
The Udmurts: On the Brink
No father should have to bury a
son.
But the world can be a sad place particularly the piece
of it called Udmurtia (ood-MER-ti-yah) in the foothills of Russia's
Ural Mountains. On a spring day there last year, Leonid touched
his son Yevgeny's cold, pale cheek for the last time and wept
as Yevgeny was lowered into the silent ground.
Yevgeny, 21, hanged himself after a drinking binge. It was
the third suicide of the year in the tiny Udmurt (OOD-mert) village
of thirty families.
Why? Hopelessness. Aimlessness. Spiritual poverty.
"Young people want everything and they want it now,"
Leonid says, sitting at his kitchen table a few months later.
"My son was that way. They watch TV and can't tell the difference
between fantasy and reality. With no work, all they do is drink."
The gulf between soaring expectations and grim, jobless reality
overwhelms some young Udmurts. They brood, drink, sniff glue,
become depressed sometimes suicidal.
Leonid folds his burly arms and shakes his head. For a long
moment, he looks out the window at the rolling hills that stretch
to the forest. He pours more tea for his Christian guests. Normally
good-natured and cheerful, the forty-three-year-old former teacher
manages a smile and even a quip or two. He brags about the homegrown
herbs he uses to brew his tea. But soon he grows pensive again.
"We Udmurts are famous for healing herbs," he says.
"Yet we have the second-highest suicide rate in Russia. I
don't understand it."
Day of Prayer and Fasting
In many ways, Leonid's personal tragedy symbolizes the struggle
of the Udmurt people. But he also symbolizes hope for the Udmurt,
because Leonid has become a believer in Jesus Christ. He was led
to faith by Vasily Zagrebin, an Udmurt Baptist evangelist, and
Southern Baptist missionary Tim Wicker. Now he wants to help take
the Gospel from village to village, so other Udmurts might know
hope and escape the hopelessness his son suffered.
The Udmurts are the focus of this year's Day of Prayer and
Fasting for World Evangelization, which Southern Baptists
will observe May 27 (Pentecost Sunday).
You can use this article as you pray that day or at other times.
You also can order a new DVD from the International Mission Board.
It contains multiple resources for use by churches, small groups,
and individuals, including a video profile of the Udmurts and
several "virtual prayerwalks" through Udmurtia. To order
the DVD and other free resources, visit ime.imb.org/dayofprayer
or call (800) 999-3113. To learn more about how to reach the Udmurts
and other peoples of the former Soviet Union visit
hope4cee.org.
The Udmurt people, who number about 770,000, are one of the
larger non-Muslim groups in Russia. Ethnically related to the
Finns, they have occupied what is now known as Udmurtia for probably
millennia. Written history, however, records their emergence as
a distinct people in the sixth century A.D.
This pastoral group has been dominated by various peoples and
empires over the centuries, including the Mongols, the Russians,
and the Soviets. Their communist-era Udmurt Autonomous Soviet
Socialist Republic became the democratic Republic of Udmurtia
in 1990 as the Soviet Union crumbled, but it remains a part of
the current Russian Federation.
The Udmurts have been nominal adherents of the Russian Orthodox
Church since they were forcibly converted by Russian monks and
military commanders in the 1700s. But their skin-deep Christianity
has mingled ever since with older, deeper layers of animism and
nature worship.
An estimated two thousand Udmurts are evangelical followers
of Christ barely a quarter of 1 percent of their total
population. Some two hundred of them worship with ethnic Russians
in the nine Baptist churches of Udmurtia. Few evangelical churches
are considered truly Udmurt; most preach and teach in Russian
with a mixture of Udmurt and Russian worship songs.
Tradition and Troubles
Traditionally, Udmurts revered sacred forests (they are known
as "people of the woods"), the land, the sky, the sun,
water, spirits, ancestors, their mythical creator "Inmar,"
and a host of lesser deities. They made sacrifices to their gods
in forests and sacred barns, but knew nothing of personal repentance
or divine forgiveness. They saw their offerings as barter in exchange
for a good crop, fertility, and prosperity.
How much do the old ways influence Udmurts today? Some say
paganism has faded. Others see a direct link between pagan practice
and the alcoholism and suicide that torment their people.
Whatever their origins, the problems of the Udmurts threaten
their long-term existence. Like many indigenous peoples, particularly
in the former Soviet Union, they have experienced a cultural revival
in recent years. Yet as one Udmurt leader laments, "We are
a minority in our own republic," which is socially and economically
dominated by the Russians.
Most Udmurts live in small villages, many of which count only
a few families. The years of economic chaos after the fall of
communism hit Udmurtia hard. Decent jobs remain hard to find.
Higher education is even harder to attain. Many Udmurts get by
on family gardens.
The birthrate in the countryside is low; the mortality rate
from alcoholism, particularly among men, is high. Some Udmurt
young people leave for the cities and assimilate into Russian
culture. They try to forget their rich language and ethnic heritage
or never learn it in the first place.
For those who stay in the villages, what's left?
"Youth in the countryside can't see the future or the
meaning of life," says a young Christian in Izhevsk, Udmurtia's
capital. "They don't have anything to look forward to."
Flickers in the Darkness
But lights of hope are flickering like scattered candles in
the darkness surrounding the Udmurts.
"I genuinely sense that God is working among them now,"
says Wicker, who is based in Moscow. He directs Southern Baptists'
"virtual strategy coordinator" initiative for some of
Russia's key unreached peoples. The effort connects Gospel-needy
peoples with Southern Baptists in the United States who commit
to reaching them.
For now, however, Wicker personally serves as "virtual
strategy coordinator" for the Udmurts. He looks forward to
the day when God calls an individual within a Southern Baptist
church to coordinate work among these people. Meanwhile, he visits
the region regularly, building partner relationships with Baptists
and other evangelical leaders. They include Alexander Popov, the
head pastor of the Baptist association in Udmurtia. Popov is helping
spearhead a united movement of Christians convinced the time has
come to reach all of Udmurtia with the Gospel.
Other lights illuminating the darkness:
House churches and worship
groups are springing up in Udmurt villages, thanks to the ministry
of Udmurt evangelists.
Young Baptists and other
Christians in Udmurtia are reaching out to the lost of their generation
Udmurts as well as Russians. The Christian music/drama
group "Paradigma," for instance, tours villages and
orphanages to bring the love of Christ. "We perform often
for people who have no hope," says Paulina, a "Paradigma"
member. "But they hear us sing, they see our faces, and they
have hope."
Some younger Russian Orthodox
priests in Udmurt villages gladly accept Bibles to give to members
of their flocks.
Baptists and other evangelicals
in Izhevsk are touching hurting people through posters and public-service
TV commercials that offer a way out of alcoholism and drug abuse.
People who respond to the media outreach can call a hotline for
help. They also can come to the International Center for Hope,
which ministers to addicts, orphans, abused children, and other
wounded people through Christian counseling and twelve-step programs.
What else is needed? Many, many more churches and Udmurt disciples
to lead them. A complete Udmurt Bible translation, which is in
the works. A set of chronological Bible stories designed specifically
for Udmurt culture and worldview.
Most of all, the Udmurts need your prayer.
"We've got to get people praying," says Wicker. "I'm
so thrilled about the Day of Prayer and Fasting and how
it's going to generate a spiritual force. We've got to get the
Gospel out there."
Unite now in prayer for the Udmurts:
Father, break down the strongholds of paganism, alcoholism,
depression, and suicide that oppress the Udmurts so they may see
You through Jesus Christ.
Lord, bring about the rapid completion and wide distribution
of the new Udmurt translation of Your Word.
Unite Udmurt and Russian Baptists and other believers in
a grand vision to reach all of Udmurtia with Your Gospel.
Lord God, multiply churches among the Udmurts into an unstoppable
church-planting movement.
Father, guide Your servants in the production of a set of
chronological Bible stories that will effectively communicate
Your truth to Udmurts.
Lord, open hundreds of Udmurt villages to showings of the
JESUS film.
Extend Your Spirit throughout Udmurtia, Lord God. Extend
your mercy and grace to the Udmurt people.
Your prayers will help decide the future of Russia's struggling
"people of the woods" during this year's Day of Prayer
and Fasting for World Evangelization on Sunday, May 27.
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