Boko Haram Survivor Calls on Christians to “Stand Strong”
ICC Note:
Deborah Peters, a Chibok native, told her story of tragedy and survival at a press conference hosted by the Hudson Institute earlier this week. Peters testified to how Boko Haram militants knocked on her door to kill her father and brother for their Christian faiths. Emmanuel Ogebe of the Jubilee Campaign, Justice for Jos, and the Nigerian Working Group Washington, D.C. spoke to both Boko Haram’s past and future, calling on the Nigerian and U.S. governments, as well as other members of the international Community to gather in arms to locate and release the more than 240 girls abducted from Chibok and Warabe villages by Boko Haram.
05/16/2014 Washington, D.C. (BRnow.org) – A teenage Christian survivor of Boko Haram terrorism in 2011 talked openly May 13 for the first time about her ordeal, expressing hope that her story would encourage Christians to persevere in persecution.
Deborah Peters, 15, said in a panel discussion hosted by Hudson Institute in Washington that Boko Haram murdered her Christian father and brother and bound her between the corpses at her home near Chibok, the same town where the Islamic terror group kidnapped nearly 300 school girls in April.
“I hope if people hear my story, I think they will understand,” Peters said, “and they will know more and more of what God said and they will understand what it means to stand strong and have courage.”
Peters was joined on the panel by Emmanuel Ogebe, a human rights lawyer with the U.S. Nigeria Law Group and expert in U.S.-Nigerian relations, who helped Peters come to the U.S. through a program established after Sept. 11, 2001, to aid victims of terrorism.
While Peters’ father was Christian, her mother was Muslim and fled to safety a month before the murders after Boko Haram destroyed the church Peters’ father pastored.
“In November, they burned his church, but still, he didn’t give up and built the church again,” Peters said. “So they said OK, they’re gonna kill him. And they came to our house and killed him.”
On the night of Dec. 22, 2011, three Boko Haram militants entered the Peters home after knocking on the door. They pulled her father from the shower, demanded he renounce his faith and killed him when he refused, Peters recounted. Her father referenced Matthew 10:33 in holding fast to Christianity.
“He told them that he should rather die than go to hellfire,” Peters said of her father. “So, he then told them that [Jesus] said anyone that denied Him, He’s gonna deny them in the presence of his Dad in heaven. So my dad refused to deny his faith and they [shot] him three times in his chest.”
Surmising that her brother might become a Christian pastor if allowed to live, Peters said, the men shot him twice in the chest and, after his body convulsed, once in the mouth.
“I was in shock. I didn’t know what was happening,” Peters said. “So they put me in the middle of my dad and my brother. The next day the army came … and [took] me to hospital.”
While Boko Haram in 2011 portrayed themselves as “gentlemen terrorists” and fostered a reputation of only killing men, Ogebe said, they have escalated in number and callousness.
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