Hello and welcome to the photo blog of A Captured Life Photography! We're based in Waco, TX and we shoot weddings, families, kids, seniors, and any other random thing you can think of. This blog serves as a journal for our professional work, personal imagery, family pictures, and travels. ENJOY! And if you like what you see here, feel free to leave us a comment :)

If you're looking for our online portfolios, you can find them on the website.
Our prices - very reasonable. Our mission - to make SCHWEET photography available to everyone!

If you are interested in being the next entry on the blog, send an email or fill out the contact form on the website. We look forward to meeting you!

We Flew! It was INCREDIBLE!

Yesterday was one of the most memorable days of my life - right up there with my wedding and the birth of my first child. We met some key players in an amazing story. First, the story...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Taken from HCJB Global's website - to read more, go to http://www.hcjb.org/about_us/history/operation_auca.html
Operation Auca—the vision to introduce the gospel to the once-savage Auca (Waodani) Indians in Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest region—brought together five outstanding young missionaries, all at the peak of their careers. Auca is the Quichua word for “savage”; Waodani is the tribe’s own word for “people.” Quichuas are descendants of the Incas.

Nate Saint, Jim Elliot, Pete Fleming, Ed McCully and Roger Youderian, all in their late 20s and early 30s, were intent on making the first peaceful contact with the then-violent tribe that was infamous for spearing outsiders and their own in an unending cycle of revenge killings.

Saint and McCully discovered a Waodani settlement from the air in late September 1955. Later Saint found a settlement that was only a 15-minute flight from their station. They told Elliot and Fleming about their findings, and the four planned their evangelistic strategy which they called “Operation Auca.”

They would keep the project secret from everyone but their wives (to avoid being joined by adventurers and the press) with the chance that someone not dedicated to the mission would start shooting at the first sign of real or imagined danger, and destroy the project.

On Oct. 6, 1955, Saint and McCully made their first of 13 “gift-drops” in Waodani territory. With Saint circling his MAF plane in a tight spiral, McCully used a rope to lower an aluminum kettle as a gift to the ground. It contained 20 brightly colored buttons and rock salt.

The two men would fly over the village nearly every Thursday and used gifts as a means of making contact and establishing a friendly relationship. Soon the Waodani began responding to the gift-drops, tying return gifts onto the rope such as a headband of woven parrot feathers. Once the Indians sent up a live parrot.

After three months of air-to-ground contact during which they made far more progress than they had hoped, the missionaries decided that it was time for one-on-one contact. They feared that they could not keep their activities secret much longer, and that delay risked a hostile encounter between the Waodani and some third party.

They decided that the expedition needed a fifth man, so they brought in Youderian who was accustomed to living with the Shuar and had learned acute survival skills.

On Dec. 3, 1955, Saint found a sandbar which he named “Palm Beach” to serve as a temporary landing strip for his yellow Piper aircraft.

The first landing was made on Palm Beach on Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1956. It took five flights to ferry in their supplies and all five missionaries. For three days the missionaries waited for the Waodani to appear. Finally, on Friday, Jan. 6, the first contact was made as three members of the tribe stepped out of the jungle and onto the beach, including an Indian they nicknamed, “George.”

Film footage shows the missionaries and Waodani interacting peacefully. But tribal members became suspicious of the outsiders. “George” lied to the tribe, telling them that the five missionaries were cannibals and they were the ones who had in fact eaten Dayuma, a woman who fled the tribe years earlier when she was a girl, fearful of the constant killings.

“George” lied to deflect attention from the fact that he and one of the young women, “Delilah,” were off in the woods on their own and they weren’t supposed to be. “George” wanted “Delilah” as another wife, but the tribe had already said no.

Three years later when Dayuma returned to the tribe and told them that the five foreigners were not cannibals, the tribe realized that George had lied to them, and they killed him.

At about 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 8, five of the powerful Waodani warriors speared the five missionaries to death and ransacked the plane on the beach. Although the missionaries had guns and could have defended themselves, they agreed together not to use them against the Indians, even if attacked.

Receiving no radio contact from the missionaries, on Monday Johnny Keenan, Saint’s colleague at MAF, flew over Palm Beach and spotted the damaged plane and several bodies in the river. Two days later a ground party arrived at Palm Beach and found the missionaries’ dead bodies. A memorial service was held in Quito for the five martyrs the following Sunday. Saint was 32, Elliot, 28, Fleming, 27, McCully, 28, and Youderian, 31.

Although the five met a tragic death, their efforts would lead to introduction of the gospel to this once-violent tribe three years later. All five of the Waodani killers became believers, and many of the tribal members now follow Christ. The touching story would also inspire thousands to commit their lives to full-time missionary service, helping spread the gospel to unreached people groups around the world.

Several documentary films have been made throughout the years, including “Through Gates of Splendor” and “Beyond the Gates,” produced by Bearing Fruit Communications. A dramatic motion picture, “End of the Spear,” filmed by Every Tribe Entertainment, will be released in theaters Friday, Jan. 20. A book with the same title was recently authored by Steve Saint, son of pilot Nate Saint.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The place where we are staying, Shell Ecuador, is the place from which the 5 missionaries flew into the jungle. The airstrip is within walking distance from our house! Yesterday we boarded a tiny plane and headed into Waodani territory! Waodani, by the way, is pronounced more like "Wah-oo-rani." It was about a half hour flight, and when we landed we were greeted by about 15 members of the tribe. When the doors to the plane opened, immediately there were arms reaching for my baby girls! I looked to Rick, our pilot, and he said that the woman reaching for Evie was Mincaye's wife - holy smokes! Mincaye was one of the 5 men that speared the missionaries, and is now a leader of the Waodani people. He is the main character in the movie "The End of the Spear." If you haven't seen it, I highly recommend it.

So we climb out of the plane and are surrounded by Waodani. I was so giddy I thought I would faint! Mincaye's son was translating for us as only the young folks speak Spanish - the elders only speak Wao ("Wah-ooh"). His wife carried Evie while a young girl picked up Anna! Both girls were quite sober, but they handled the whole thing very well. They led us through the jungle to their homes where we talked for a little while. Here's a picture with Mincaye and his wife!

Isn't that AMAZING? Seriously, when we were walking through the jungle Chase and I just kept looking at each other with silly smiles, shaking our heads! And when we got back into the plane I was speechless. Here are some more pictures of our adventure.

Here we're following the Waodani into the jungle, trying to keep up with them as they carry our children away!

The girls enjoyed playing with Anna's fine blond hair. The hands in the mouth are evidence that she was a bit nervous, but she did wonderfully!
We also landed in Dayuma's village and had a picture taken with her. We bought a necklace that she'd made and we'll wear it, remembering to pray for them all!

What an end to our Ecuadorian adventure. The thought of leaving will make me cry - we're really not ready to leave. It seems like our gifts and training are a great match for this area of the world - now we wait and see what God thinks! We're very open to returning to this amazing country.

Please visit the gallery labeled "Ecuador" for more pictures!

Posted byJennifer Thebault at 5:40 AM  

2 comments:

Anonymous said... March 27, 2008 at 12:24 PM  

wow jenny. i teared up while reading this. amazing. full of praise, kp

Holly Bollinger Photography & Design said... March 27, 2008 at 3:03 PM  

That's amazing! God is so awesome! We pray for you guys every night. Jacob prays for his little cousins to be safe and healthy. I'm so glad you all got to have this experience, and as a family. We love you all!!

Post a Comment