Joel Doba was a young
man from an animistic background from the south of the Republic of Chad. It was leprosy that drove him from his home
area to a leprosarium in Nigeria near the large
northeastern city of Maiduguri. He had come to the leprosy
hospital a young man, very bitter and rebellious towards God and in utter
despair. He had no friends to welcome
him, no hope in his heart, no testimony to share. During his early days at the leprosy hospital
he suffered a great deal with the condition known as lepra reaction. Sometimes he would be the patient; but when
he was in remission from that condition, he demonstrated a loving spirit to
fellow sufferers and frequently was seen helping others who were in need of
such compassionate care.
During his stay at the
leprosarium, he began to hear the message of salvation. He had come from an animistic, idolatrous
background. It was also at about this
same time that a new medical regime was instituted that greatly speeded his
healing and restoration to wellbeing.
There was a young lady
who came from the same background, had the same disease, and was also steeped
in animisms. She likewise, through the
preaching of the Word, saw her sinful condition and put her faith in Jesus Christ. She chose as her Christian name Hannatu
(Hannah).
The doctor in charge of
the leprosarium saw the bitterness and anger toward God in the life of Joel and
gave him a French New Testament which he received gladly. It was largely through the reading of that
New Testament and also later when he was given a New Testament in the Hausa
language that he began to understand the way of salvation; and it was at the
leprosarium that he first understood the way of salvation through faith alone
in Jesus Christ, and be became a radiant Christian.
There was a blind
evangelist at the leprosarium who read the Hausa Bible in brail, and that was
one of the clinching factors that brought Joel to saving knowledge of the Lord
Jesus Christ. Joel saw how rebellious he
had been toward God and offered himself unreservedly for God to use.
The African church in Nigeria at that time was
reaching out to isolated areas on the west side of Lake Chad and also to the many islands in that
great lake. The head African nurse at
the leprosarium became a part of this missionary outreach; and, because of
Joel's evident love for and skill in medicine, he stepped into the position of
head African nurse at the leprosarium.
It was about this time that he married Hannatu.
On several occasions,
for short periods of time, he would go to the dispensaries that were being
established along the west coast of Lake Chad, and it was there that he caught
a vision of the need of the Buduma tribes people who inhabited the islands in
Lake Chad. In due time, Joel and Hannatu
offered themselves for missionary service there in Lake Chad.
That was in 1965.
They were assigned to
several different posts over the next few years and then finally settled on an
island called Magi where they made their home and base as they ministered to
these Muslim tribes people that inhabited the islands. Joel was not content to minister only to the
limited population of this village, but he would trek out to surrounding
settlements, taking with him a few medicines and always preaching the Word of
God, caring for those who were in spiritual as well as medical need. Travel on foot and wading in the shallow
water was slow and very tiring; and, where the water was a little bit deeper,
he used reed canoes which were bulky, large, and heavy to propel with a long
pole through the marshy reeds and water vegetation. He began to come to the conclusion that there
must be a better way to reach the surrounding islands with their Muslim
populations.
He thought of the
long-legged camel. He communicated with his
supporting churches in the south of Chad that supplied him with
sufficient funds to buy this means of transportation. I first met Joel about 1969 when we were
serving in Chad. He told me that when he bought
the camel he thought that he should give it a name, but camels are very strange
and obstreperous animals and, unlike other domestic animals, are rarely given a
name. If they were to be given a name,
it would probably be one of those unrepeatable names. He thought back on missionaries he had known,
and almost all had sturdy four-wheel
drive Land Rovers; so he chose to call his camel Landrover. Now it was with greater ease that he was able
to travel from island to island on his medical and evangelistic outreaches.
It was during these
early days when he was learning this new language that he became fluent enough
that he could, without difficulty, communicate the Good News of the Gospel to
these island dwellers. The first man
that he led to the Lord was a man named Ali.
He had been a man who became a friend to Joel and, on many occasions,
helped him in the clinic work.
My contact with the
family was via the Missionary Aviation Fellowship's amphibious plane which
would take me to these remote islands periodically to be of help to Joel in his
medical work and also to preach to the people, as most of them also knew the
Hausa language. It was always a joy to
fellowship with him and Hannatu and their growing family. It was on one of my visits he related this
incident. Having been on visitation to nearby
islands and being transported by Landrover, he was coming back to Magi. Just coming up out of the water, they met
face to face with a very irate elephant.
Landrover bolted and threw Joel on his back spread-eagle in a couple
inches of water, and the camel raced off into the village leaving Joel to
confront a very angry elephant whose domain had been entered. He looked from side to side and saw those
huge feet. If they were to move only a
few inches they could have crushed the life from him. He looked up into those long white, pointed
tusks that could very well have impaled him ending his life at once and that
long trunk that could have picked him up and thrown him to his
destruction. What to do? He said, "I didn't know whether to play dead
or to try to run, but I chose to play dead and barely breathed, all the time
looking up into the angry face of that beast.
How I did pray!!" he reported. It
seemed like an eternity, but in all probability it was only a few minutes. Finally the elephant backed away and went
back into the tall reeds that surrounded the island. Then Joel got up and ran for his life into
the village.
I was holding clinic on
the occasion when he related that story.
We were in a small, temporary hut, the walls of which were constructed
of reeds woven together in a long mat affair.
There were spaces between these reeds making it very easy to look out
and to look in as well. Joel had a very
rickety small table on which I placed by diagnostic tools and a stool that
looked rather unserviceable. I was
seeing patients for him, when I had the sensation of someone looking over my
shoulder. As I was sitting right near
the back wall of the hut, I turned around to see what it was that had caused
that reaction and found myself looking eyeball-to-eyeball with an ostrich that
had come, stuck his head through the reed wall and was looking around seeing
what was going on. Fortunately, he
didn't come into the clinic for treatment on that occasion.
I made periodic visits
to Magi and to some of the other national missionaries' ministries to help and
encourage them in their work and to give advice in medical matters. As I look back, I see that this was an encouragement to me as
much as I to them, for I saw that the nationals could and were doing a
tremendous work without a resident missionary by their side.
My last visit to Joel
was in 1970. The work was still,
relatively speaking, in its infancy.
During the next number of years, a European missionary family was
stationed on the island. Their main
ministry was to study the language and to assist in the evangelization of the
tribes people. But there was a rising
rebel activity from the Chadian side, and it became evident that it was not
safe for families to remain on the islands.
Hannatu was expecting their next child, and so sadly she returned to the
capital of Chad, N'Djamena, to await the delivery; but Joel chose to stay in spite of
the advice that he should leave. The
European couple with him on the island and their family did leave at that
time.
The first encounter
with rebels they threatened Joel and confiscated anything of value from the
missionary's home as well as from the dispensary. On the second encounter with the rebels, they
led Joel and several other nationals out in the desert threatening to kill
them. But for no known reason they let
Joel go free, and he returned to the island to carry on his ministry. Finally the rebels came and completely destroyed
or confiscated anything of value, burned the clinic and the missionary's home,
and carried Joel off into captivity.
This was in 1978.
At first, the guerilla
leaders tried to make Joel deny his Christian faith by saying the Muslim
prayers, but he refused. They beat him,
but he would not comply. They carried him
off to their headquarters camp. On
several occasions they again, after long interrogation, tried to make him deny
his faith in Christ and convert to Islam; but he staunchly refused to do
so. They valued his medical skill, and
he became the main medical caregiver to the rebel group that was holding
him. On two different occasions he was
carried out into the desert and threatened to be shot. On both occasions, he was the target, but
none of the bullets came near him. On a
third occasion, military planes loyal to the government of Chad spotted the encampment
and strafed it repeatedly with many bullets.
Many rebels who were standing by Joel were killed, but again nothing
harmed Joel. He became known as a man whom
God protected. Many of the rebel
soldiers wore charms that were supposed to prevent any physical damage, but
they were the ones that were being killed and Joel was spared. Finally, because of very poor diet and
continual moving about with the rebel troops, he became ill and weak and unable
to do very much. Then, much to his surprise, the commandant of the rebel
movement came and said that he was setting him free, gave him an official
document of release, and provided him with two guards to escort him back to
Maiduguri. He had actually been in
captivity for over seven months and had had virtually no nourishing food during
those months.
When he had been taken
captive, he had nothing save the clothes on his back. One day one of the rebel soldiers came to him
secretly and handed him a small parcel.
When he opened it up, he found that it was a French Bible in a leather
zippered case. The rebel had seen it in
the missionary's home and thought it must be something valuable. Unable to read the French he nevertheless had
kept the book; he gave it to Joel and said, "Maybe this is of value to
you." It was indeed. He thrilled to be able to hold the Word of
God in his hand again. Soon after that,
in a miraculous way, one of the African missionaries on the Nigerian side was
able to secretly send in to him a Hausa Bible which was a thrill to Joel. He kept these treasures hidden from the eyes
of his captors, but feasted his soul on the Word of God.
After his release and
three days of travel, weak and exhausted, he finally reached Maiduguri and
found his way to the home of the senior pastor in that area, the one who had
married him and Hannatu a number of years earlier. There he was tenderly cared for, transferred
to a mission hospital where he was given excellent care, and finally then
transported back to N'Djamena, Chad, and reunited with his
family.
As Joel became
stronger, he began to get back into the work at the hospital in Nigeria, but found the work
very taxing as on occasion he had to trek up into mountainous areas. Weak and ill, he realized that he was no
longer able to carry on the rigorous meetings and ministry that he had had
earlier. But after considerable rest and
good nutrition, he regained his strength.
Joel became involved in
training new missionaries to go to some of those outreach areas. Joel's staunch, unflinching testimony and
impeccable life example were great encouragement to many of the African
believers. During his incarceration, he
had been able to lead two of the rebels to faith in Christ. Some said that he should change his name from
Joel to "God answers prayer."
Joel sickened and died
early in the 1980s. I do not know the
exact date, but I think it would have to have been in the summer of '82. Here is the story of an outstanding African
who came to Christ and gave himself unstintingly for the spread of the Gospel
to people who often were hostile to him and to our Lord. How we need to learn from these national
believers!
5/2008
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