Diary of a Ziegenbalgian
[The following is an email my mother sent out
after her trip to India for the 300th anniversary of Protestant Missions. -
Ernie P.]
Diary of
a Ziegenbalgian.
"Trust in the Lord and do good
and so shalt thou dwell in the land and verily thou shall be fed." Ps. 37:
3
On July 9, 1706
Ziegenbalg the first Protestant missionary in India, landed in Tranquebar, a
city in the South Eastern part of India, trusting in the Lord. He accomplished
many good things. 300 years later I participated in the celebration as one of
16 delegates from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America to see and
celebrate the fruits of Ziegenbalg's labor.
• July 3 -
4: Grand opening of the celebration
of Ziegenbalg and Tranquebar Mission at the Gurukul seminary in
Chennai. Inaugural address by the Governor of Tamilnadu. Hundreds
of International guests - US, Finland, Germany, Denmark, Australia
and many other countries were represented at the gathering plus Christians from
all over India. Many notable speakers with power point presentations
expounded on Ziegenbalg's contribution to Tamil language, Tamil culture and the
Indian Chrisitan church.
• July 5 &
6 : I took eleven of our delegation on
a sight seeing trip ( Dakshina Chitra, Mamallapuram & Santhome Cathedral
)
• and Family visit to cousin
Mano/ Mahema Devadoss's house and Shiloh Church to meet the Edwards and Tsunami
orphan children.
• The next day we visited some
of the schools, eye hospital and a church in our future companion Synod
- 'Arcot Lutheran Church'.
• July
7: I visited Chinglepet, 30 miles
away, to attend my niece Vanitha's surprise 40th Birthday lunch. In the evening
seven of us, delegates dressed up in new sarees and attended the final day
Convocation at Gurukul.
• July
8 Saturday - New Jerusalem church
which Ziegenbalg built ( now renovated ) in Tranquebar is dedicated
• July
9 Sunday - Thanksgiving church service
was held at the church, with three different choirs, our Presiding Bishop
Mark Hanson preaching and Bishop Wollersheim reading the gospel. Commissioning
of 30 missionaries celebrating the 300 years anniversary was done. US delegation
left for US that night. I stayed behind and spent time with my family. I got
home on the 17th of July.
•
I am enclosing an
article I wrote for a friend regarding the trip. Enjoy the second half of
summer. Love, Esther Kamali
God's amazing
Grace
December 26th of 2004 is a day, four year old Lucy
will never forget! She literally saw her parents being washed away in the
Tsunami tidal waves in Nicobar Islands, near India. God's grace reached out to
her in the remote island village and today she lives in mainland India in the '
Shiloh Children's home' with 23 other Tsunami orphans. Her life is happy,
comfortable and she enjoys her school and church that is run by someone whose
life was touched by Ziegenbalg 300 years ago.
That is right, Ziegenbalg baptized
Arumugam who later became Rev. Aaron, the first Indian protestant
minister to be ordained in 1730 . My sister Elizabeth Edward ( whose family runs
the Shiloh home ) and I hail from Aaron's line. The 16 member delegation
from ELCA had the honor of being the special guests at the 300 year centenary
celebration of Ziegenbalg's arrival in India, on July 9, 1706. Some of them
visited the Shiloh church and saw the Tsunami
children.
When I sat and listened to
the seminar on Ziegenbalg at the Gurukul Lutheran seminary in Chennai, India, my
admiration and awe for that first protestant missionary shot up
tremendously. Can you imagine traveling to India in a ship,
with no immunization against tropical diseases, no culture sensitivity or
language training and only to contend with hostile Danish stationed in
Tranquebar? Isn't it God's grace that sustained him for 13 years to do
extraordinary accomplishments like learning the difficult local language Tamil,
preaching in that language, translating the Bible in Tamil and printing it ?
Isn't it God's grace that moved King Fredrick the Fourth of Denmark to
send the two German pietist missionaries to India in 1706? It is even more
amazing Grace that God chose me to be born in a Christian family in India
where there are only 3% Christians and now be able to participate in the
celebration as Vice President of Northern Illinois Synod of the
ELCA.
The two weeks in India, of
meeting people of my native country alongside the eyes of visitors from US
produced mixed reactions in me. When I saw Saraswati at the Aids Support group
in Gurukul or the little school girl who enacted the plight of a girl abused by
her step mother and teacher, I was moved to tears thinking, if not for the
Grace of God, I could be that girl / woman! Yet another part of me said
with hope, "40 years ago outreaches of this sort were not there for the women
and girls in India and so I was happy to see the resources and progress
today."
My paraplegic cousin Mahema is
a prime example of what women in India are doing now in spite of the many
handicaps and disadvantageous conditions. In her 25 years as a physically
challenged person, she has kept herself busy by teaching conversation English in
her home, helping her husband with failing eye sight to write books and donating
profits from his art work to charities. God's amazing grace at
work.
As Rev. Dr. Priscilla Singh of
LWF said, I saw India not as a half empty cup or half full cup, I saw India 'as
a cup that runneth over' touching, watering and rejuvenating lives along her own
way.
Esther Kamali
Prabhakar
Posted: Wed - August 23, 2006 at 05:42 PM