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Where we have
come from...
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Yona Pusey
EBWU president
1998-2003
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The birth of EBWU is a story
worth telling.
In 1948 Baptist world leaders
convened a meeting in London, England,to consider issues of peace and
reconciliation with particular reference to post-war Europe.
Countries were specifically invited to include women in their
delegations.
The programme was a full one,
but late one night the American and European women made time to
meet in a hotel foyer in order to explore the possibilities of closer
future co-operation. |
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Women whose husbands and sons
had been fighting on different sides during
the war came face to face with each other - and discovered two
things: on the one hand they recognised an underlying desire for an
increase in fellowship and reconciliation; but on the other hand many
of the twelve or so women uncovered their feelings of anger and
bitterness - the legacy of war.
Could any progress towards reconciliation be made
even among this small group?
During the previous 40 years
women on both sides of the Atlantic had cherished the dream of a
world-wide fellowship of Baptist women. Poor communications
and 2 world wars had postponed the dream several times, but here was an
opportunity by God's grace not to be missed.
One of the American sisters was inspired to invite
the group to stand in a circle and, while holding hands, to repeat the
words of John 3.16 each in her own language... The Holy Spirit
moved among the women; tears flowed and melted bitter hearts.
A sense of unity in Christ and the reality of the love of God enabled
them to overcome the past, and to lay the foundations for a new
Europe-wide fellowship of Baptist women.
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| 1948
- European Women meeting in London |
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Overnight it seems a
constitution was drawn up, interim officers appointed,a conference
planned for the following year, and the resolve taken to institute an
annual day of prayer as a visible sign of the newly formed fellowship.
Throughout the next 40 years,
against the background of a divided Europe, women in the western unions
went from strength to strength. The regular conference
programme was a continuing inspiration; new national
women's groups were set up in several countries, and the day of prayer
was faithfully observed (in company with women from around the world).
But always the prayer went up: "Lord give us
fellowship with our sisters in eastern
Europe." Various presidents established contact with women
behind the iron curtain, but travel in both directions was almost impossible.
In 1987 EBWU elected its
first President from a former communist country:
Julia Gero of Hungary, who was able to travel extensively in the
east, and who carried with her the assurance that the churches in soviet
countries was not forgotten by the west.
The 1989 European Baptist Federation congress in
Budapest welcomed several small groups from such churches, and later
that year the whole of Europe rejoiced when the Berlin wall was
dismantled.
At last the freedom to meet
was technically present. Other aspects of freedom have not
been so beneficial, but over the past decade it has become
more possible for travel between east and west, although as late as May
2003 visa problems have been experienced.
In 2002 members of the EBWU
committee were invited to Kiev, Ukraine, to participate with
responsible sisters from several former soviet
countries in their conference. The opportunity was taken to
recount the story of EBWU, and to re-enact the founding, this time setting
the scene for closer co-operation between east and west.
In 2003 our second "eastern"
President was elected. Ewa Gutkowska of Poland has re-learnt her
forgotten Russian, and this fact alone will ensure
greater understanding and better communication in the
future.
During the 1990s the
opportunities of meeting were eagerly embraced. Sisters
from both east and west discovered each other - and learnt that we have
our differences! We are also learning to praise God for those
differences: that is the way He has made us, and each can be enriched
through a deeper understanding and tolerance. We accept each
other in the love of Christ.
Whatever the next decade holds for EBWU, as the
strong areas of women's mission and ministry
move ever eastwards, we can know for certain
that the God of peace will be with those who live and act as
peacemakers.
Yona
Pusey
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