U.S. Missionary Could Face Genocide Charge for Entering Tribal Land

Image

Brazil: January 28, 2019. (Michael Foust: ChristianHeadlines.com Contributor) A U.S. missionary to indigenous people in Brazil could be charged with genocide after entering the land of an isolated tribe and potentially breaking the law.

Missionary Steve Campbell and his family have worked among the Jamamadí people in Brazil for more than 50 years, but Campbell could be in trouble for entering into the territory of another tribe, the Himarimã, Christianity Today reported.

The Himarimã are among the last uncontacted tribes and are protected by laws that prevent contact from outside groups. Those laws are intended, in part, to guard the tribe from diseases.

Campbell is affiliated with Baptist Bible Fellowship International. A church in Maine, Greene Baptist Church, helps support him.

“If it is configured, in the investigation, that there was interest to make contact [with Himarimã], to use his relationship with other Indians to approach the isolated ones, he can be accused of a crime of genocide by deliberately exposing the safety and life of the Himarimã,” said Bruno Pereira, coordinator of a government body, FUNAI, that protects indigenous tribes.

Campbell has lived in the area since he was a toddler. His parents moved to Brazil as translators through Wycliffe Global Alliance, Christianity Today reported.

He reportedly entered into Himarimã land while teaching the Jamamadí how to use GPS.

“He is committed to the wellbeing of the Jamamadí, and the work his father and mother did there for years, being the one source of health care, providing the initial literacy school in the Jamamadí language,” Braulia Ribeiro, a former Brazilian missionary, said, according to Christianity Today. “They might be the only reason this group survived.”

But Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, believes Christians should stop contacting tribes. Survival International champions tribal rights.

“Fundamentalist Christian American missionaries must be stopped from this primitive urge to contact previously uncontacted tribes,” Corry said. “It may lead to the martyrdom they seek, but it always ends up killing tribespeople.”

Michael Foust is a freelance writer. Visit his blog, MichaelFoust.com

You May Also Like

Image

Justice Takes a Step Forward for Sumaira George: BACA Supports a Survivor’s Family with Safety, Shelter, and Legal Aid. Report by Juliet Chowdhry and Hannah Chowdhry

Sahiwal: The British Asian Christian Association (BACA) continues to stand alongside vulnerable Christian families in Pakistan who face injustice,

Image

Standing with Shumaya: BACA Supports a Family’s Fight for Justice and Healing. Report by Juliet Chowdhry and Hannah Chowdhry

Pakistan: The British Asian Christian Association (BACA) continues to stand in solidarity with vulnerable Christian families in Pakistan, offering

Image

An Unsigned Letter Says Everything About the Welsh Government RAAC Response. Report by Wilson Chowdhry

UK: This week, I received a response from the Welsh Government to the UK RAAC Campaign Group’s Open Letter on the RAAC National Crisis. The r

"Trial of Pakistani Christian Nation" By Nazir S Bhatti

On demand of our readers, I have decided to release E-Book version of "Trial of Pakistani Christian Nation" on website of PCP which can also be viewed on website of Pakistan Christian Congress www.pakistanchristiancongress.org . You can read chapter wise by clicking tab on left handside of PDF format of E-Book.

nazirbhattipcc@aol.com , pakistanchristianpost@yahoo.com