News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Baptist Missionary Finds Meaning In Amazon Tragedy |
Title: | US: Baptist Missionary Finds Meaning In Amazon Tragedy |
Published On: | 2002-06-08 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-30 10:51:43 |
BAPTIST MISSIONARY FINDS MEANING IN AMAZON TRAGEDY
Peru: His Wife and Daughter Were Killed When They Were Mistaken for Drug
Smugglers.
CARY, N.C. -- When Jim Bowers was working as a missionary in Peru, he
shared his faith with the people living along the Amazon River. Now Bowers,
whose wife and daughter were killed last year when bullets pierced the
small plane in which they were flying, is sharing his faith with a far
larger audience.
Later this month, Bowers, 39, will travel to Portugal and England, and then
crisscross the United States, stopping in California, Indiana, Illinois,
Michigan and North Carolina. On each stop, he will recount to fellow
Christians how on April 20, 2001, the single-engine Cessna floatplane
carrying his family was mistaken for a drug-smuggling operation and was
shot down by the Peruvian air force in conjunction with CIA surveillance
aircraft.
More important, he will try to use his personal story to inspire others to
take up the mission work that he and his wife, Roni, left behind. "I do
this with the intention of challenging young people to follow in Roni's
footsteps and not let danger scare you away," said Bowers, whose steely
determination masks all signs of grief.
Promoting Book
These days, Bowers is also plugging a new book, "If God Should Choose: The
Authorized Story of Jim and Roni Bowers," by Kristen Stagg. When he's not
doing radio interviews or talking to seminary graduates, he's helping start
up a congregation of Spanish speakers at his church, Bethel Baptist, in
Cary. He lives with his mother, Wilma, and his 7-year-old son Cory, in
nearby Garner, N.C.
Bowers is convinced that, though the death of his wife and daughter might
seem senseless, it is all part of God's plan.
"The goal Roni and I had is to convince people of the truth," he said.
"Because of her death, many more people have been convinced. I have a huge
open door, much more than I would have had if we went on with our life.
There's so much evidence God was in this."
In March, on the eve of his trip to Peru, President Bush pushed a bill
through Congress that offers the survivors, including the family of Kevin
Donaldson, the Cessna pilot who suffered serious leg wounds, $8 million in
compensation. The Bush administration also acknowledged the downing of the
plane "should never have happened," though it stopped short of admitting
liability.
The compensation package is much less than the $35 million that attorneys
for the Assn. of Baptists for World Evangelism had sought on behalf of
their two missionary families. But it is not the money that Bowers wants.
Despite his belief that God was behind the events, Bowers said he would
like to see someone take responsibility. After three investigations, no one
involved in the crash has lost a job or gone to jail, he said.
"You'd think somebody would stand up and say, 'You can't get off scot-free
acting like that,' " Bowers said. "They continue as if nothing happened."
But Bowers doesn't want to dwell on the negative. He said he has forgiven
everyone involved.
He envisions spending the next few years in North Carolina, working at his
church. When he is at home, he and Abel Grande, a Latino leader at Bethel
Baptist, go into the immigrant neighborhoods of Cary, knocking on doors and
inviting people to church services, Bible studies or soccer games.
Child of Missionaries
In some ways, it is not too different from the life Bowers knew in Peru or
the life his parents led as missionaries along the Amazon River in Brazil.
Bowers was groomed to be a missionary. Long before he and Roni settled into
their houseboat near Iquitos, Peru, the 8-year-old Jim Bowers attended a
boarding school for missionary children in the same town. After graduating
from the Grand Rapids, Mich., Baptist Academy, Bowers enrolled at Piedmont
Bible College near Winston-Salem (now Piedmont Baptist College), a school
that offered training in missionary aviation.
There, Bowers met Roni Luttig, a fellow student. Like him, Roni had wanted
to be a missionary since she was a child, and the two became fast friends.
They married in 1985.
After Jim served a short stint in the Air Force, the couple made plans for
their life's calling. Instead of setting up a house in Iquitos and
traveling up and down the river to reach indigenous Indians, the couple hit
on a novel idea. They would build a houseboat and live in it.
In 1997, their dream became a reality. Roni taught women's Bible studies
and children's Sunday school. She home-schooled Cory.
Off to Get a Visa
After adopting newborn Charity, the couple needed to arrange a residence
visa for her. Peruvian regulations required that the girl get her visa
stamped upon entry into the country, so the couple decided to fly to
neighboring Colombia and secure a visa at the Peruvian Embassy.
They were on their way back to Iquitos when bullets hit their small plane.
One bullet hit the back of Charity's head and penetrated Roni's heart.
Despite all that has happened, Bowers said his call to missionary work
overseas has never wavered. He would like to return to the Amazon, though
probably not to Peru.
But first, he said, he would need to remarry.
"Not enough people are willing to go," he said. "Why shouldn't I? I'm ready
and willing. It doesn't make sense to stay here. But I can't go back
without a mother for Cory."
Peru: His Wife and Daughter Were Killed When They Were Mistaken for Drug
Smugglers.
CARY, N.C. -- When Jim Bowers was working as a missionary in Peru, he
shared his faith with the people living along the Amazon River. Now Bowers,
whose wife and daughter were killed last year when bullets pierced the
small plane in which they were flying, is sharing his faith with a far
larger audience.
Later this month, Bowers, 39, will travel to Portugal and England, and then
crisscross the United States, stopping in California, Indiana, Illinois,
Michigan and North Carolina. On each stop, he will recount to fellow
Christians how on April 20, 2001, the single-engine Cessna floatplane
carrying his family was mistaken for a drug-smuggling operation and was
shot down by the Peruvian air force in conjunction with CIA surveillance
aircraft.
More important, he will try to use his personal story to inspire others to
take up the mission work that he and his wife, Roni, left behind. "I do
this with the intention of challenging young people to follow in Roni's
footsteps and not let danger scare you away," said Bowers, whose steely
determination masks all signs of grief.
Promoting Book
These days, Bowers is also plugging a new book, "If God Should Choose: The
Authorized Story of Jim and Roni Bowers," by Kristen Stagg. When he's not
doing radio interviews or talking to seminary graduates, he's helping start
up a congregation of Spanish speakers at his church, Bethel Baptist, in
Cary. He lives with his mother, Wilma, and his 7-year-old son Cory, in
nearby Garner, N.C.
Bowers is convinced that, though the death of his wife and daughter might
seem senseless, it is all part of God's plan.
"The goal Roni and I had is to convince people of the truth," he said.
"Because of her death, many more people have been convinced. I have a huge
open door, much more than I would have had if we went on with our life.
There's so much evidence God was in this."
In March, on the eve of his trip to Peru, President Bush pushed a bill
through Congress that offers the survivors, including the family of Kevin
Donaldson, the Cessna pilot who suffered serious leg wounds, $8 million in
compensation. The Bush administration also acknowledged the downing of the
plane "should never have happened," though it stopped short of admitting
liability.
The compensation package is much less than the $35 million that attorneys
for the Assn. of Baptists for World Evangelism had sought on behalf of
their two missionary families. But it is not the money that Bowers wants.
Despite his belief that God was behind the events, Bowers said he would
like to see someone take responsibility. After three investigations, no one
involved in the crash has lost a job or gone to jail, he said.
"You'd think somebody would stand up and say, 'You can't get off scot-free
acting like that,' " Bowers said. "They continue as if nothing happened."
But Bowers doesn't want to dwell on the negative. He said he has forgiven
everyone involved.
He envisions spending the next few years in North Carolina, working at his
church. When he is at home, he and Abel Grande, a Latino leader at Bethel
Baptist, go into the immigrant neighborhoods of Cary, knocking on doors and
inviting people to church services, Bible studies or soccer games.
Child of Missionaries
In some ways, it is not too different from the life Bowers knew in Peru or
the life his parents led as missionaries along the Amazon River in Brazil.
Bowers was groomed to be a missionary. Long before he and Roni settled into
their houseboat near Iquitos, Peru, the 8-year-old Jim Bowers attended a
boarding school for missionary children in the same town. After graduating
from the Grand Rapids, Mich., Baptist Academy, Bowers enrolled at Piedmont
Bible College near Winston-Salem (now Piedmont Baptist College), a school
that offered training in missionary aviation.
There, Bowers met Roni Luttig, a fellow student. Like him, Roni had wanted
to be a missionary since she was a child, and the two became fast friends.
They married in 1985.
After Jim served a short stint in the Air Force, the couple made plans for
their life's calling. Instead of setting up a house in Iquitos and
traveling up and down the river to reach indigenous Indians, the couple hit
on a novel idea. They would build a houseboat and live in it.
In 1997, their dream became a reality. Roni taught women's Bible studies
and children's Sunday school. She home-schooled Cory.
Off to Get a Visa
After adopting newborn Charity, the couple needed to arrange a residence
visa for her. Peruvian regulations required that the girl get her visa
stamped upon entry into the country, so the couple decided to fly to
neighboring Colombia and secure a visa at the Peruvian Embassy.
They were on their way back to Iquitos when bullets hit their small plane.
One bullet hit the back of Charity's head and penetrated Roni's heart.
Despite all that has happened, Bowers said his call to missionary work
overseas has never wavered. He would like to return to the Amazon, though
probably not to Peru.
But first, he said, he would need to remarry.
"Not enough people are willing to go," he said. "Why shouldn't I? I'm ready
and willing. It doesn't make sense to stay here. But I can't go back
without a mother for Cory."
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