Pray-er
It was May, 1991, and the Soviet
Union was falling apart. Gorbachev’s glasnost policies had turned the hearts of
many of the satellite republics towards a spirit of nationalism that resulted
in the countrymen of these republics wanting to rid their lands of anything to
do with Russian dominance over the past 70 years. Statues of Russian generals
were being removed and names of streets and cities were being changed from
Russian names to Kazakh, Tajik, and Uzbek names.
I had the opportunity to be in
the middle of these historic changes from 1989-1994 through a couple of
companies that I had established in 1990. One of these companies took American business
people to the former Soviet republics before communism fell to teach western
business principles. Believe it or not, we used Junior Achievement material to
teach banking, accounting, marketing, and other subjects. One of the challenges
was getting these people who had lived for generations under the socialism of
the communist regimes to understand free enterprise and all the good things
associated with it, like profit and losses.
The other company did community
development work in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan. When we first
started working in this area there were no other companies from the west
registered. Until just before communism fell in 1991, our business training
company was one of only two western companies registered in Kyrgyzstan.
It was a case of being in the
right place at the right time. There are many stories from these years, and we
will share more of them at a later time.
Today I want to tell you about
one of the several delegations from these republics that we hosted in the
US. My first introduction to these
former Soviet republics was through a consortium of Baptist colleges and
universities. I was working with Mississippi College at the time when this
consortium was formed at the Atlanta airport in August, 1987. We were part of
this consortium from the very beginning, and it was this introduction that led
me to want to do more in that part of the world.
We were
bringing official government delegations from these republics to the USA for
the first time since before the time of Stalin in the 1920s. Each delegation
consisted of three high level government officials, an interpreter, and a
representative of the KGB whose job was to make sure that these government
officials returned to the USSR.
It has been difficult in this
post not to tell stories that come to mind about these experiences with these
government friends, but I must save those for another time and move on to my
story for this posting.
The mayor of Frunze, the capital
city of the Kyrgyz Republic, was accompanied by the government’s Minister of
Education and the Minister of Culture and, of course, a representative from the
KGB. I recall that the title they gave him was something like the Associate
Deputy Director for Internal Administrative Affairs. We enjoyed joking with him
about us knowing that he was in the KGB, and he was kind-hearted enough to
laugh with us rather than attacking us with a piano wire!
After hosting this Kyrgyz
delegation in Washington, DC, Chicago, and Atlanta, we brought them to
Mississippi. One evening during their visit, I had some business to take care
of at my office, so one of my colleagues picked them up at their hotel in
Jackson and brought them to our home in Clinton. A cable had arrived in my
office for the mayor, so I delivered it to him in my living room. He opened the
cable, and there was a lot of buzz in the Kyrgyz language—the three government
officials often spoke in Kyrgyz when they did not want their KGB colleague or
interpreter to understand them.
After a few minutes of discussion,
our Russian interpreter explained that the mayor had been asked to cast the
deciding vote for the new name of their capital city. Frunze was a famous
former Soviet army general, and the Central Asian republics were trying to rid
their countries of all Russian influence.
The mayor cast his vote for
Bishkek in our living room that evening, and the next day our office sent the
cable that determined the name of the capital city of the Kyrgyz Soviet
Socialist Republic, which today is known as Kyrgyzstan.
Among the many stirring memories
from these experiences with our Central Asian friends were the opportunities to
share our faith with them. During that same Kyrgyzstan delegation visit we took
our friends to church. That was the first time any of them had ever attended a
church service.
It was a large church, so we
decided to arrive just as the service had started so the delegation would not
draw any attention. We sat near the back of the auditorium, and as the service
was about to end, the pastor, a friend, recognized our delegation and asked me
to pray the benediction.
After the service was finished
and we were walking to our vehicles, one of the delegation said to me in broken
English, “Larry, I not know that you are a pray-er.” That sentence has been
played over and over in my mind through the years. I pray. But, am I really a
pray-er? Is praying such a second nature action for me that others recognize me
as a pray-er?
I think that my Kyrgyz friend was asking me if I was some kind of holy man. He did not know other English words to describe what he wanted to ask me, so he asked in the only way he knew how. The way he used the word is not proper in our colloquial English, but it was a powerful word for me to hear, and I hope that it rings in your heart of hearts just as it has in mine for the past 20 years. Lord, I want to be known as a "pray-er."