‘God, I don’t want to die,’ U.S. missionary wrote before he was killed by remote tribe on Indian island

R0H1T

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Jan 12, 2013
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Washington man traveled to India to convert isolated tribe.
NEW DELHI — An American missionary trying to meet and convert one of the most isolated hunter-and-gatherer tribes in the world offered them fish and other small gifts before the tribesmen killed him and buried his body on the beach, journals and emails show.

John Allen Chau, 26, of Vancouver Wash., an Instagram adventurer who also led missionary trips abroad, traveled to the Andaman Islands — an Indian territory in the Bay of Bengal — this month to make contact with members of the tiny Sentinelese tribe, police said. The tribe, which has remained isolated for centuries, rejects contact with the wider world and reacts with hostility and violence to attempts at interaction by outsiders. The island is off-limits to visitors under Indian law.

Chau’s riveting journal of his last days, shared with The Washington Post by his mother, shows a treacherous journey by dark in a small fishing boat to the area where the small tribe lived in huts. The men — about 5 feet-5 inches tall with yellow paste on their faces, Chau wrote — reacted angrily as he tried to attempt to speak their language and sing “worship songs” to them, he wrote.

“I hollered, ‘My name is John, I love you and Jesus loves you,’” he wrote in his journal. One of the juveniles shot at him with an arrow, which pierced his waterproof Bible, he wrote.

“You guys might think I’m crazy in all this but I think it’s worthwhile to declare Jesus to these people,” he wrote in a last note to his family on Nov. 16, shortly before he left the safety of the fishing boat to meet the tribesmen on the island. “God, I don’t want to die,” he wrote.

Fishermen saw the tribe burying his body on the beach the following day, a fellow missionary wrote in an email to his mother, Lynda Adams-Chau of Vancouver, Wash.

“I believe he is still alive,” she said in a short email to The Post. Asked why, she replied, “My prayers.”

“He was a beloved son, brother, uncle, and best friend to us,” his family wrote on Instagram. “To others he was a Christian missionary, a wilderness EMT, an international soccer coach, and a mountaineer. He loved God, life, helping those in need, and he had nothing but love for the Sentinelese people.”


American adventurer John Allen Chau (right) stands for a photograph with Casey Prince, founder of Ubuntu Football Academy in Cape Town, South Africa, in October 2018, days before he left for the remote Indian island of North Sentinel Island, where he was killed. (AP Photo/Sarah Prince)
Chau maintained a lively Instagram feed of his travels in Africa and other remote locales — including photos of leech and snake bites — and led missionary trips for youth from Oral Roberts University in Oklahoma, his alma mater, and others. He spent at least part of the year living in a remote cabin in the Whiskeytown National Recreational Area in California, according to his posts. In his bio, he said he was a follower of the Christian group “the Way,” as well as a wilderness emergency medical technician and explorer.

He had made four prior trips to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands starting in 2015 and arrived in Port Blair in mid-October on a tourist visa, according to police. He paid five fishermen to take him to North Sentinel Island, said Deepak Yadav, a senior police official in Port Blair.

A fellow missionary told his mother that Chau’s plan was “not to tell anyone” what he was up to and avoid putting friends at risk, emails show.

Yadav said that Chau and the fishermen arrived at the island about midnight Nov. 14. The next day, Chau used a kayak to approach the island and attempted to speak with the islanders, who have been known to fire arrows at interlopers. The fishermen told police that they last saw Chau alive on Friday.

The next morning, they saw his body “being dragged and then buried,” Yadav said.

Police sent a helicopter to conduct reconnaissance on Tuesday, and a separate team traveled to the area Wednesday. An investigation is underway, and the fishermen involved have been arrested, as has a friend of Chau’s in Port Blair who helped organize the boat trip to the island, the police official said.

“They were very well aware of the situation, but they still arranged for a boat and everything,” said Yadav, a move he described as “pushing [Chau] in the mouth of death.”

No one knows exactly how many Sentinelese live on North Sentinel Island. Attempts by Indian census officials to count them from a distance have put their number at fewer than 100. The Indian government adopted a policy of “isolation with minimal intervention” toward the Sentinelese and several other tribes in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, which are in the Bay of Bengal off the eastern coast of India.

Chau, in Instagram posts and in journals, had found its remote beaches both inspiring but frightening, he wrote in his journal.

“Why does this beautiful place have to have so much death here?” he wondered hours before his death. “I hope this isn’t one of my last notes but if it is ‘to God be the Glory.’”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...r-with-remote-indian-tribe-hostile-outsiders/
 

ch33zw1z

Lifer
Nov 4, 2004
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He's in a better place. Although, it sounds like he had it pretty good here on Earth as well.
 

WelshBloke

Lifer
Jan 12, 2005
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Chau is a dickhead. Those peoples have no immunity to a lot of diseases he carries, contact from him could kill a lot of them.
Also it's just plain rude to rock up on someones island when you aren't wanted and start preaching at them!
 

R0H1T

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Jan 12, 2013
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I guess the moral of the story is that we need "less" religion, especially in our daily lives? The other part about "respecting boundaries" cannot be overstated.
 
Jan 25, 2011
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You'd almost think there was a reason the Indian government expressly prohibits ANYONE from visiting North Sentinel Island. Shit I've know this for years. They absolutely will kill you without question.And they are immune from any sort of legal ramification as well.

And recovery of his body for his family is unlikely for some time. It may not happen at all.
 

Viper1j

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Jul 31, 2018
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You'd almost think there was a reason the Indian government expressly prohibits ANYONE from visiting North Sentinel Island. Shit I've know this for years. They absolutely will kill you without question.And they are immune from any sort of legal ramification as well.

And recovery of his body for his family is unlikely for some time. It may not happen at all.

The body was most likely roasted over an open fire with some spices.
 
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Jan 25, 2011
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I have to correct myself. Apparently the current Indian government removed the requirements to get permits to visit several of the Andaman Islands, including North Sentinel.

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/sto...overeign-citizens-of-india-1393188-2018-11-21

In August this year, the Modi government removed the Restricted Area Permit (RAP) from 29 islands in Andaman Islands. North Sentinel Island is one of these islands. The RAP was removed with the objective of promoting tourism.

The order will remain in force till December 2022. This means that foreigners are no longer required to seek permission to visit any of these islands. So, victim Chau apparently did not commit any illegality when he entered North Sentinel.
 
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Jan 25, 2011
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How do you know? Have you been there?

They probably wouldn't be practicing at this point. I would think after a century, they would be very good at it.
Of course I haven't. Others have. They have examined what happened in the past when visitors landed on the island and were killed. They don't eat them.
 
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interchange

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I really fundamentally disagree with work aimed at spreading religion or anything directly to those not asking for it. If you go somewhere that allows outsiders and set up a place of worship that is open to all who are curious, great. If you go to that land and offer charity, great. If you offer charity on condition of any kind regarding your religion, I do not support that.

I know this guy's actions are going to be universally derided here, but there is I think something worth discussing about missionary work in general.
 

R0H1T

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Jan 12, 2013
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I have to correct myself. Apparently the current Indian government removed the requirements to get permits to visit several of the Andaman Islands, including North Sentinel.

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/sto...overeign-citizens-of-india-1393188-2018-11-21
This is a bit different, the Sentinelese tribe are protected from the Indian law as they're recognized as a sovereign state under the Indian dominion. The access to that area is restricted because of the reasons mentioned above. So while under "Indian laws" technically he may not have done anything illegal, the same laws don't apply to that island.
I know this guy's actions are going to be universally derided here, but there is I think something worth discussing about missionary work in general.
In theory the work of missionaries was supposed to be more benevolent, but we all know how it turned out in reality. Admittedly not all of them wanted to infect the native tribes with their super bugs, but there are enough wars & damning evidence to show us what the endgame was.
 

Denly

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May 14, 2011
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I really fundamentally disagree with work aimed at spreading religion or anything directly to those not asking for it. If you go somewhere that allows outsiders and set up a place of worship that is open to all who are curious, great. If you go to that land and offer charity, great. If you offer charity on condition of any kind regarding your religion, I do not support that.

I know this guy's actions are going to be universally derided here, but there is I think something worth discussing about missionary work in general.

I can't put it well enough so I just quote you for it, my thoughts exactly. They're stone throw away from modern science, if they wanted to keep their way of life let them.

You guys might think I’m crazy in all this but I think it’s worthwhile to declare Jesus to these people
 

KMFJD

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Aug 11, 2005
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The boat stopped 500-700 meters from the island and he used a canoe to reach the shore of the island. He came back later that day with arrow injuries. On the 16th, the (tribespeople) broke his canoe.
"So he came back to the boat swimming. He did not come back on the 17th; the fishermen later saw the tribespeople dragging his body around."

from the cnn article

smh
 
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Bitek

Lifer
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Seems the height of arrogance on his part to intrude into a territory where he's not invited and start preaching and trying to change their culture.

Guess they made their views clear on the matter.
 
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VRAMdemon

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I don't really see the problem here: He told them about the wonders of Heaven, and they rewarded him with a free trip.

He went back to the island after coming out to the boat with arrow injuries? Some people can't take a hint. He eventually got the "point". He should have just text them. Maybe Trump will enforce a strict trade embargo with the Sentinelese.

I’m sure this will recurve it’s way into the Darwin Awards nominations this year.
 
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pmv

Lifer
May 30, 2008
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I do think it's tragic and feel a bit sorry for the guy. But, really, he's kind of the architect of his own misfortune.

But I would blame the ideology that gave him the idea that he has not only the right but even a duty to go spread his ideology where it doesn't really belong. Missionary work causes nothing but trouble. Even if the missionaries don't get themselves killed all they seem to do is create minorities to be either persecuted or persecute others in the future. When it's rich white American missionaries it's even more problematic. (Though apparently now some African Christians now see themselves as doing missionary work in converting the British back to Christianity, as we've all strayed so far from the path!).

It seems possible, though it's not very clear, that it wasn't made sufficiently clear to him that this was not allowed and/or was very dangerous, so in that regard maybe he wasn't entirely to blame for his fate.
 

Viper1j

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Seems the height of arrogance on his part to intrude into a territory where he's not invited and start preaching and trying to change their culture.

Guess they made their views clear on the matter.

Double that arrogance, considering he had to know that he wasn't the first idiot to try this.
 

kage69

Lifer
Jul 17, 2003
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You've got to be a real moron, or an absolute zealot (or both), to completely ignore the viral/bacterial threat that contact would impose. Not sure I feel sorry for this guy, but then I've never really cared much for missionaries or any other kind of addled culture warrior.

I remember reading how Indian government thinks the tribe lost a fair number of people during a typhoon, wasn't a big group to begin with. I wouldn't be surprised to hear they are incredibly inbred, might also explain the immediate aggression towards visitors.

Sentinel Island will be uninhabited before long though I would imagine. The people there may have already been exposed to germs from the idiots body, and typhoons happen all the time.