Murder in Kabul
By Nico Bougas, Special to the ASSIST News Service
KABUL AFGHANISTAN (ANS – June 25, 2015) -- Three armed Taliban
insurgents swept into a Kabul guesthouse on Nov. 29, murdering three
South Africans and two Afghans in the compound of an international aid
agency in the Afghan capital.
Werner
Groenewald and his two teenage children were murdered in the guesthouse
where they lived in Kabul’s western Karte Seh district, along with an
Afghan employee of their small aid organization, Partnership in
Academics and Development (PAD). Another Afghan man visiting the
compound at the time was also shot dead.
Dr. Hannelie Groenewald, the wife and mother of the South African
victims, returned home late that Saturday afternoon from her work at a
medical clinic to find her family’s bullet-ridden bodies being loaded
onto ambulances. They included her son Jean-Pierre (17), and daughter,
Rode (15).
The attackers had set the house ablaze, leaving her with only the
clothes she was wearing and destroying all the family’s documents and
other possessions.
At least seven Afghans present in the compound were held hostage
during the four-hour battle between the attackers and Afghan security
forces. Another two persons were injured by random gun shots in the
basement area. The murdered Afghan staff member of PAD, who is not named
for security reasons, was married with two small children.
One surviving Afghan who reportedly managed to hide himself behind
steel cabinets in the compound, which served as both home and offices
for PAD staff, said the attackers shot Groenewald in the leg when they
entered the building.
The insurgents had thrown a grenade at the gate into the compound to
force their way into the two-story guesthouse. They were armed and
wearing police uniforms, with one militant strapped into a suicide vest.
According to what Hannelie Groenewald later told her sister Riana du
Pleiss, in Pretoria, “They took people hostage, and then they went
upstairs after Werner again. They shot Werner again and the children.
That’s where they died.”
Meeting in Pretoria
I had the privilege to meet Hannelie in Pretoria several months after
this tragic situation. I was amazed at her calm demeanor and her
determination to press on with her service to God. I put several
questions to her and here are her answers:
1. What were you and your husband doing in Afghanistan?
Werner and I had a clear calling from God in 2002 on two separate
visits to Pakistan and Afghanistan, to be His hands and feet to the
Afghans.
Werner was National Director of PATH (Partnership in Academic
Development). He was involved in offering leadership courses, Community
Training courses (CDE), offering English as a second language classes
(ESL) and life management training (Life Coaching. For this he used Dr.
Gustav Gous's course of “Get-a-life-in -40-days)
For me, my first responsibility was to Werner and to see to the
children's needs. This occupied most of my time. I gave the children
home schooling. Jean-Pierre was in grade 11, and enrolled at the
Hatfield Christian School Online in Pretoria, and Rode was in Grade 8
and a pupil of Brainline distance education. It was by far my biggest
challenge to help the children with their school work and to keep them
motivated.
Then I supported Werner in his ministry, and I was very involved in
offering special community development courses for Afghans and
orientation courses for new foreign Christian workers. Hospitality is a
great service in a country where there are many foreign visitors each
week to visit, especially the people who supported us. I was always
ready with a home-prepared meal or a cup of coffee and cake for
visitors.
It was a huge challenge to find the balance between my tasks at home
and the huge demand there was for the services of a Western-trained
doctor. I had a small office at home and had patients after the day's
school work done free. I usually gave prescriptions, and sometimes a
little money with the prescription for patients who really could not
afford medication. Fortunately, medications are generally very cheap in
Afghanistan.
I worked 2-3 days a week in an Afghan clinic that was more focused on
western patients. The salary I earned there, we just used to pay our
Afghan office workers. Finance remains a major headache on the field,
and our case was no exception. The financial support from individuals
and churches from South Africa was not enough to carry all our office
and personal expenses.
2. Your two teenage children were still of high school age. How were they completing their schooling?
The schooling was traumatic because both children's school took place
through the Internet. There were always connectivity problems.
Sometimes the Internet did not function at all or for several days. We
made sure that we always had at least 3 mobile internet service
providers in the house because there was almost always connectivity
problems. Assignments, tests and examinations were downloaded, completed
and uploaded again within a matter of a certain time. This caused
increased stress levels and incredible frustration. Communication with
the schools was mostly a nightmare because even a phone call to South
Africa or Skype calls were not always possible.
Children love competition at school. That factor was absent, and the
lack of communication with other pupils who toil through the same
problems, causing self-discipline and motivation to do your best, did
not always exist.
But the children had a wonderful life learning school. They were very
aware of the pain and suffering and poverty in the world. They traveled
extensively, was worldly and was very well-adjusted, loving teenagers.
Sports activities for my daughter, Rode were non-existent. Due to the
lack of free movement and exercise her muscles were underdeveloped and
she struggled with scoliosis and much pain. Her brother, Jean-Pierre,
was more free to move around alone and enjoyed cycling and sometimes
played cricket with Afghans in the street.
3. Did you feel safe working and living in Afghanistan?
Because we had received a very clear call of God, we knew we had a
mandate to live and work there. We knew we had chosen a dangerous land
in which to live and work. People should not to go with their children
to Afghanistan to live and work, if they do not have a clear call from
God. We had to count the cost of obedience. We had to be prepared to lay
down our lives. We had to die to self and our human needs and follow
Jesus. Life there was hard. It was not a holiday. There is a spirit of
destruction in that country. Everything breaks. Nothing works right or
for any length of time.
Because we knew we MUST be there, we knew we did not live in fear.
Our lives and safety were in the hands of God. We knew that if something
would happen to us, that the Lord would have a higher purpose.
We did not live in fear. We tried to live as normally as possible. I
owned my own car, even went shopping. Werner and Jean-Pierre took early
morning mountain bikes and trained for cycling events due to take place
in South Africa in December. Life was much more limited for me and Rode
because women lead much more constrained lives in Muslim countries. For a
teenage girl, life and her physical freedom was incredibly
dysfunctional and caused many questions in my mind.
4. You are busy writing a book on this sad experience. When do you expect it to be published?
Yes, I intend to write a book. I still do not feel quite ready to my
story into words. There are still too many unanswered questions in my
mind about the attack. There is too much hurt what I still need to work
through. I'm afraid if I put my thoughts on paper now that I would want
the content to be changed later. I feel I have a few more months to
grieve and get my life and thoughts in order. Maybe I could write the
book next year.
5. This was a terrible experience which would have devastated
most other people. What were the factors that enabled you to emerge
with your faith intact?
In Afghanistan, precisely because of extremely difficult living
conditions I learned to trust God without reservation. I had to learn to
trust God with all my heart, His love for us, His omnipotence and
omniscience. The life there shaped me for this fiery trial. I usually do
not have answers to many difficult life issues. I had100% trust in God.
He had the answers. He sees the bigger picture. I went into a very
deep, personal love relationship with God which I would not trade for
anything else.
My deep belief, childlike confidence and experience of God's
greatness and goodness and miraculous intervention in many situations in
our lives through many years, helped me to get up from the ashes. It's
like God gave to me a little glimpse and His perspective on what
happened, and that I should not focus on what I see around me, but to
look up to Him. He was always in control. He was never caught unawares
by the attack.
My relationship with Him has deepened significantly in the past 6
months. I have experienced the power and comfort of the Holy Spirit in
my life. I experienced Him at this time as a God who truly honors His
promises. A God who provides. A God of love.
6. Did you get any help from the Afghani police or defense force? Have any arrests been made?
I received no help from the Afghan police. They never even told me
during questioning on the night of the attack, that all the members of
my family had been wiped out.
The Afghan Intelligence Service did follow my movements in the days
until I had left Kabul. The South African police have opened a murder
docket because the bodies were repatriated to South Africa. But after my
affidavit was completed and sent. I heard no more and I think the case
is closed.
No arrests have been made to date, and I doubt it very much if there will be arrests in the future.
7. What are your plans for the future?
God showed me that I should not return to the secular medical sector.
I remain in His service. Whether it will include medical further in the
future, and once again outside the borders of South Africa, He will,
when the time is ripe for it, reveal it to me.
For now, I know that I have a witness to carry out into the world.
People who have become lukewarm in their faith should to turn their
hearts to God again, because there is little time. People should be
prepared for the most difficult times to come that awaits humanity.
Photo captions: Werner and Hannelie Groenewald. 2) Nico Bougas.
About
the writer: Nico Bougas is the International Development Director for
Hellenic Ministries. He has a master's degree in communication from
Wheaton Graduate School and M. Div and D. Min degrees from Trinity
Theological Seminary. He is the author of five books. He previously
worked for Youth for Christ in South Africa and was Editor of In
Magazine and Christian Living TODAY and currently serves as Consulting
Editor for JOY Magazine and a Trustee for Radio CCFM and was one of the
founders of Sports Outreach Africa. He previously served on the national
executive of the SA Association of Evangelists and as a Trustee for the
Bible Institute of South Africa and on the advisory board for the South
African Theological Seminary and on the executive of The Evangelical
Alliance Relief Fund (SA). For further, information contact: nico@bougas.info.
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