Nur das Leben könnt ihr mir nehmen - That’s all you can do to me
Figures were running around, the thatched huts were burning. Wayindama was caught. "Who are you? Are you from the mission school? Are you a student? Pastor?" "Pastor." "Worse!" There was a hail of blows. Bleeding, Wayindama sank to his knees. The leader shouted, "You know I can kill you?"
Emmanuel Wayindama,
Pastor in Zaire (Foto: AIMM).
More information:
Emmanuel Wajindama
The first warning Pastor Emmanuel Wayindama and his family had was the sound of excited shouting in the distance and the sight of shadowy figures leaping about, systematically setting fire to the thatch-covered homes of Bible Institute students. Pastor Wayindama had been brought to Kandala in the fall of 1963 to serve on the teaching staff of the Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission’s Bible institute. An earlier graduate of the institute, he had displayed not only a keen mind but also a deep commitment to his Lord and to the church. When the search was on for Congolese to join the teaching staff at Kandala, Pastor Emmanuel Wayindama was an early choice. The institute had been displaced from Kalonda, near Tshikapa on the banks of the Kasai River some 100 miles to the east, because of the tribal conflict that had erupted there after the hastily granted independence in 1960. Unfortunately, the move placed the institute in a territory where a different kind of unrest was brewing, in which missions were often a target. On this violent night in January 1964, all along the Kwilu River, Catholic and Protestant mission posts were attacked.
As rebels arrived at the small thatch-covered home of Pastor Wayindama, his wife and family managed to escape into the surrounding darkness, but the pastor was intercepted. “And who are you?” they asked him. “Are you also part of this school of foreigners that the missionaries brought here to Kandala?” “Yes, I am a teacher at the institute.” “So you are not a student?” Pastor Wayindama was a small man. “Are you then a pastor?” “Yes, I am.” “A pastor! That’s even worse.” From that point on, the interrogation was accompanied by a hail of blows, some with fists, some with the wooden arcs of the bows and arrows carried by each rebel. Pastor Wayindama was soon bloodied and beaten to his knees. Then the rebel team leader leaned over and shouted into his face: “You know that I can kill you right here on this spot, don’t you?” Pastor Wayindama looked into the eyes of his tormentor and through bloody, swollen lips replied: “Sure you can, but if you do, that’s all you can do to me!” The rebel leader was speechless. He had fully expected to see the pastor grovel at his feet, pleading for his life. For a long moment he stared at Pastor Wayindama, then turned and ordered his team elsewhere.
Jim Bertsche, in: Global Anabaptist Encyclopedia.