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    Violence in Mexico curtailing faith-based missions

    McALLEN, Texas (AP) — John and Wanda Casias knew the risks of being missionaries in one of Mexico's most violent, cartel-dominated regions, their children say, but they refused to curtail their work and instead put their ministry ahead of their safety.

    The couple's slaying this week during a home invasion comes as missionary groups are rethinking how they prepare their volunteers to live in Mexico and other hotspots — or whether to send them at all.

    The cartel-fueled violence in Mexico has made parts of the country so dangerous that the U.S. government warns Americans not to travel in those areas. Mission groups, which have long flourished in the border region and other areas, have been forced to dial back outreach efforts and some have cancelled trips altogether out of fear missionaries could be targets.

    For those determined to work despite the risks, at least some groups are starting to send volunteers to the same security training camps corporations and aid groups have used for years to prepare their employees for risky overseas assignments.

    "For all of our new missionaries in recent years it is mandatory that they get security training commensurate with the risk level in that country," said John David Smith, executive director of the Baptist Missionary Association of America Department of Mission, which has four families currently volunteering in Mexico according to its website. His organization also has put in place other safety measures such as forbidding missionaries from driving in and out of Mexico, which would force them to travel through more dangerous border areas.

    The Casiases, who were from Texas but lived in northern Mexico for 29 years, were found Tuesday by one of their sons at their home in Santiago, Nuevo Leon, both strangled. Mexican investigators have said they suspect they knew their attacker because no doors or locks were forced.

    Another son, John Casias, said he had spoken to them many times about their safety, but they lived by faith.

    "They weren't ignorant," he said. "He (John Casias) knew about the murders. My mother knew about what was going on in Mexico. They understood it. They knew it. Were they scared to death? No. They weren't going to live in fear."

    Their deaths came about one year after another missionary from Texas was killed in Mexico. Sam and Nancy Davis were driving out of Mexico in January 2011 when gunmen tried to stop their truck about 70 miles (112 kilometers) south of Reynosa. When they refused to stop, the gunmen fired, killing Nancy Davis. The Davises, too, had done missionary work in Mexico for three decades.

    Sam Davis has since gone into hiding, his mother, Francille Davis, said Thursday.

    "They're still wanting to kill him," she said of the gunmen. Davis, who lives in South Texas, said she did not know where her son was, but did not think he had returned to Mexico as a missionary.

    It's unclear how many Americans are missionaries in Mexico. No single agency tracks the missions, which establish churches and schools, build homes, run feeding and counseling centers and perform other outreach. There has been no evidence that the Casiases were targeted by a cartel, and authorities believe the Davises were likely attacked for their truck. Generally, missionaries say they try to keep a low profile and go about their work.

    David Dose, who runs Fort Sherman Academy, a security training firm in Idaho that specializes in faith-based clientele, said his training has increased 400 percent in the past five years. While faith-based groups were slower to seek such training than corporations, he said he's seen a change in the past couple of years as groups look for more ways to prepare than faith alone.

    "They're already spending all the time and money they can just to prepare for what they're doing and volunteering," Dose said. "But also there's been a bit of a struggle between at what point is it just not in the same spirit."

    The academy's training generally covers areas such as information security, risk assessment and minimization, as well as specific situations such as hostage taking. He said while aid groups in some hostile countries hire private, armed security guards, the faith-based groups he works with do not.

    "There's no desire to take an arsenal and go protect yourself in that way," Dose said of his faith-based clientele. "We're having to deal with how people can use their brains and the thinking that God gave them to try to improve the situation. But in the end ... you have to assume there's probably some risks you have to live with because you believe in what you're doing."

    Many organizations have seen the number of missions they send to Mexico decline.

    Daniel Rangel, director of River Ministry/Mexico Missions, which is part of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, said he only had about 80 mission groups last year compared to 400 before the violence got out of hand. Most that do come stay on the U.S. side of the border and just cross during the day and return later, he said.

    The reduction in missions has been difficult for their partners in Mexico. "A lot of the people on the border feel abandoned," he said. They still ask churches to send resources even if they can't send volunteers.

    For years, Jim Walters, director of Vision Ministries in Indiana, brought mission teams to Saltillo in northern Mexico. They would fly into San Antonio, rent vans and drive into Mexico through Laredo.

    But a few years ago they stopped going.

    "I was becoming increasingly uncomfortable with the safety and security issues," Walters said. "People were more reluctant to go."

    Before making his decision to stop the trips, Walters said he spoke with many other groups doing similar work.

    "I sensed a lot of them had discontinued or were seriously considering," he said. "It's a shame. A lot of good work and resources have dried up for them."

    They now take their missions to Barbados.

    __

    Associated Press writers Michael Weissenstein in Mexico City and Linda Stewart Ball in Dallas contributed to this report.

     

    10 comments

    • eduardo  •  Warren, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      I do agrre but we should start here in the us where all the drug addicts are then we can move on any where else
    • The MeXorcist  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      BOO !
    • Harry  •  San Jose De Guaymas, Mexico  •  3 mths ago
      Nice to see Americans have rejected racism. This makes the jobs of the missionaries so much easier. Please excuse me but why do Christian missionaries need to preach in Mexico? Mexico has been a Christian country since about 1530. Why do all these Christian groups feel that they are the great know it alls and the rest of the world are such stoops? Just maybe the guy does not want to be preached to or loved by his neighbor but the SOB just wants to be left alone. Big parts of Mexico are extremely dangerous at the moment. Until Armericans lose their love for drugs, things are not going to improve. I would tell the missionaries to stay home. Mexico and Mexicans do not need to be saved. They just need for the Americans to stop buying drugs.
    • coyote kid  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Missionaries in mexico go to convert catholics to their religion. Notice these missionaries had a SUV and a safe that was chisled out of the wall. Robbers wanted the bibles that were in there to distribute.
      • Big Leo 2 mths ago
        Most Mexicans do not go to Catholic services even if they are nominal or baptized Catholics. The society is highly secular. That's why the missionaries are necessary.
    • Allen. Gale  •  Henderson, Nevada  •  3 mths ago
      You just can't teach sub-human Mexicans...Savages is what they all are!
      • Anthony Orozco 3 mths ago
        Savages? The United States had LEGAL human trafficking(slavery), participated in over 8 wars...and mexicans are the savages?
      • Fakecountry 3 mths ago
        You just can't teach the subhuman crackheads and arms dealers from the USA
    • Louis  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      Mexico is beyond help,c orrupt, poor, uneducated only hope is to sell the uncivilized dump to a civilized country.
      • Fakecountry 3 mths ago
        Mexico's history of civilization begins in 1600 BCE with the Olmecs, when did "civilization" begin in your country?
      • Louis 3 mths ago
        Mexico is civilized?
    • SuperG  •  Portland, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      Stupidity isn't appreciated by God, regardless of your motivation. If you can't hire the security needed, stay home!
    • Sporky McCrackin  •  3 mths ago
      Mexico needs a mass sterilization program with the goal to eventually reach a population of zero. This should be done immediately along with a similar program for Muslims.
      • gilberto 3 mths ago
        Sporky needs a retro-active abortion
      • Fakecountry 3 mths ago
        Nah, sterilize the crack addicts of NA instead
      • eduardo 3 mths ago
        if you will like to sterilized the mexicans start with all the, drug adicctcs rightt here inyour back yard and then you may be able to continue any whrerelse you wnat to go, think before you speak
    • bayliss  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  3 mths ago
      seal the border,stop the flow of drugs and the problem for the most part will be solved.and if a bunch of drug addicted americans drop dead from withdrawal so be it.and mexico? let them sink or swim,i do not really care.
    • rand  •  3 mths ago
      You may " Praise the Lord" but you better " pass the ammunition". This idea of seperation of Church and State had better be done by religious groups in foreign countries.
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