In the Fight
June 2003
My wife looked quizzically at me after I got the
call. “I thought you hated Congo flights?” A hint
of excitement must have been evident on my face.
After all, I was just called in to finish off a
week-long evacuation out of Bunia, a volatile
little town in eastern Congo. Trips into this area
had become notoriously stressful—dictated by the
five-year civil war, frequent poor weather, and
just general chaos. And it was true that I would
almost rather fly anywhere else, but not today. I
tried, unsuccessfully, to explain to Renee why this
particular Saturday was so important to me. Perhaps
I really didn’t know until it was all over.Bunia
had exploded into violence… again. A dizzying
conglomeration of politics, ethnic hatreds, and old
fashioned selfish greed had once again erupted. The
unprepared UN force in town was rendered helpless
and retreated into a defensive posture at the
airport in a desperate effort to protect their own
way out. While the international community held
meetings and CNN cried “genocide,” the innocents in
Bunia were subject to things far too real to print
here. AIM AIR was called up on Sunday by our
coworkers in the town; Many Congolese pastors,
teachers, and students with their families were
trapped in the worsening situation. Some had
already gone missing, most were just hiding and
praying. These were “our” people—people who were
supported in their ministries by AIM and AIM AIR
through the years. They wondered if we would come
for them now. Of course we would. It took two days
to get our first airplane on the ground followed by
five days of shuttles out by three planes and a
bunch of people both flying and organizing the
loads. Our list of people to move started at a few
hundred, and swelled to well over a thousand by
Friday. Saturday would wrap up the operation with
our Caravan and DC-3 doing four more shuttles each,
bringing the total number of people moved to over
1500.I was one of two crew in the Caravan that day.
Matt had already been in over the past few days and
he took the controls out of Entebbe to show me how
it would be done. The plan was to get in and out of
Bunia as quick as possible… short steep approaches
from the west and departures in the opposite
direction. Flying over town might invite
ground-fire. At the airport were a few of our
seasoned missionaries preparing the loads of those
fleeing, making sure we carried the right people,
and staving off the abuse of “officials” who would
rob them of their last few earthly possessions. For
one long day, we operated out of “anarchy
international airport,” carrying loads of
frightened Congolese, mostly children, from Bunia.
Matt and I switched back and forth from the left
seat, one acting as captain while the other
attended to seatbelts and cleaning up vomit.
Remembering the faces of those we flew, I recall
that there was a fear much greater than flying
which they were leaving behind them as we departed
each time. They were somber faces, introspective,
and somehow very deeply thankful with a quick
glance at the two golden shouldered strangers in
the cockpit. A smile and a gentle touch on the head
of a child were all the language we needed to say,
“your welcome.” Some weeks later I learned that our
presence there that week was possibly the greatest
single testimony ever, to the Congolese church,
that they were part of The Church—the Body of
Christ. These were people who thought they didn’t
have a friend in the world. But they prayed and The
Church responded with planes, pilots, people to
work out the logistics and people to foot the
forty-thousand dollar bill. I am told that word has
spread among the Christians in Eastern Congo about
what happened that week… as well as some
bewilderment surrounding just what kind of people
would come to their rescue.On the ramp between
loads, I stood by my Caravan and watched some of
those people. Razor wire, armored trucks, troops
and children, arguments and petitions, and the roar
of C-130s dwarfing our sizable DC-3—through all
this chaos, the dust, wind and searing heat, I
looked on at my colleagues; Dale and Tim in the
madness of a sea of people, Brian and Rod in the
cargo door of the twin-turbo Dakota… and Matt in
the middle of it all. These were my teammates at
AIM AIR—among some of the best men I’ve ever known.
What amazed me standing there was not so much the
satisfaction in watching them, but the privilege in
being counted among them. Referring to this week of
flying, one of our missionaries on furlough wrote
to me saying, “I miss being in the fight.” At first
it struck me as an odd thing to say as a
missionary, but after that day on the ramp in
Bunia, I knew exactly what he meant. For these men
that I respect and admire are not only servants,
but soldiers. And although our work is not a battle
in the conventional sense, it is fraught with
genuine sweat and tears, and sometimes on our
knees. All things considered, that town was
probably one of the least desirable places to be on
the planet that day. Yet I felt so fortunate to be
there, to be one of the team, and in the fight.
That week in Eastern Congo was a reminder to me
what an amazing team God has placed within the
ranks of AIM AIR—from the radio operator to the
pilot in the scruff. In one single day perhaps, I
learned what it meant to be part of such a team…
and to see how small and how large is my place in
the Body of Christ.
