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Ggg Guide

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Day 1
Day 1
There is a tiny flame flickering in the west of Russia, near Ukraine. Only 50 Adyghe believers hold the light for 120,000 of their Muslim countrymen. Their forbearers once embraced Christianity, but they became converts to Islam through the intermingling with the people of neighboring countries where they fled for their lives in the 1860s. More recently Islam was completely accepted when they instituted sharia law.
They are rich in outreach, having been adopted by several churches. They have a New Testament and Children’s Bible translated into their language, the JESUS Film, and literature in their language. But still, there has been no church planted. The few Adyghe believers attend a Russian Baptist Church and are being assimilated into the ranks and culture of the Russians rather than flowering in their own setting. This limits the outreach to their own people.

* Pray that the veil will be lifted from the eyes of the Adyghe people. * Pray also that they will see the truth and put their faith in Christ alone. * Pray that the Lord will send long-term missionaries to form relationships with the Adyghe, and that key leaders will be raised up among the Adyghe people who will boldly proclaim the gospel. * Pray that God will use Christians in Ukraine to reach out to the West Circassians.

Day 2
Day 2
Isolated! That is how the Aghul people are described in the Joshua Project website. They live in a very mountainous region. Where there are mountains, people usually stay in the same place their entire lives, free from outside ideas. Their traditions and customs remain intact.
There are four different Aghul subgroups, and their language is very similar to the neighboring Lezgians. Aghul men sometimes go to nearby towns to trade their dairy products for grain and manufactured goods. That means that the men are more likely to be influenced by the outside world than the women and children. Though there are 28,000 Aghul people, only 100 of them have moved to neighboring Ukraine.
But outside influences have come to the Aghul people, though they are rare. In the 8th century the Arabs conquered their homeland, at which time the Aghuls became Sunni Muslims. Today each Aghul village includes a mosque in the central square. They are conservative Muslims, but they hold onto some pre-Islamic beliefs.

* Pray that the Aghul people in Ukraine will have the chance to hear of Christ’s redemptive work for those who believe He came to save sinners. * Pray that the gospel will make its way into all four Aghul subgroups, and also into the homelands of the related Lezgians. * Pray for Christ to reveal Himself to Aghul leaders.

Day 3
Day 3
In a mountain valley in the Caucasus Mountains the Avar farmer hoed the ground. The soil was thin and he turned up numerous rocks as he prepared the field for spring planting. Being a farmer was a hard life. Only 15 percent of the land in the Avar homeland is suitable for farming. Being a Muslim, the farmer had never read the Bible, so he’d never heard of the Parable of the Sower. Many previous Christian missionaries have found the Avars to be “rocky ground.” In years past the Avars haven’t been open to the message of salvation.
At one time the Caucasus region was ruled by empires that had a Christian witness. Then the Arabs, and later the Mongols, conquered this region and introduced Islam to the Avars. Even after the Avars began converting to Islam, some resisted. Some of these people were Christians. There were several bloody rebellions, which were brutally crushed. By the time the Russians conquered the Avar homeland in 1874 there were no Christians left among this people group.

* Pray that the Holy Spirit would miraculously turn this rocky soil into good soil that Christ can penetrate. * Pray that Russia would ease the restrictions placed on missionaries attempting to operate in the Caucasus Mountains. * Pray that workers will soon go to the Avar homeland with the JESUS Film in a language the Avar people can understand.

Day 4
Day 4
Azerbaijani of Ukraine
An ethnic minority anywhere would certainly understand the feelings and perspective of Azerbaijanis, also known as Azeris, who live in the country of Ukraine.
According to the 2001 census, there are just over 45,000 Azeris living in Ukraine. Most of them live in Donetsk (8,000), Kharkiv Oblast - (5,600), and Dnipropetrovsk - (5,600). The number of ethnic groups grew very rapidly - especially between 1960 and 1990, it increased 5.5 times, largely due to instability in the South Caucasus. Today, Ukraine is home to the 7th largest Azeri community in the world.
The resettlement of Azerbaijanis into the territory of Ukraine is marked by certain historical events, dominated by migration processes that were primarily economic in nature. About 2,300 Azeris are native Ukrainian speakers. Ukraine is also host to a number of Azerbaijani guest workers which has yet to be ascertained.
The majority of Azerbaijanis are Muslim, mainly Shia. Ukraine has never had a serious problem with Islam phobia and Azeris are one of the least religious nations on earth. They don't regularly practice their religion nor do they express their faith in the way they dress.

* Pray that God’s people will reach out to Azeri Muslims, and that the Azeri language JESUS Film will be widely viewed in Azeri communities. * Pray for Azeris to soften their hearts to Christ. * Pray that believers that go to unreached peoples like the Azeris will be Christ-centered and present the gospel to them in a simple, relevant way.

Day 5
Day 5

The Balkar hat maker, Medina, was thrilled by another new order for her sheep fur hats. She told a friendly customer, “My hat business has been doing better these last few weeks. We are slowly becoming known as a Mecca for people who love the outdoors and health resorts.”
A number of Balkars are well known throughout Russia as writers, singers, actors, scientists, doctors, and nuclear physicists. Yet overall, life has been difficult for most of the estimated 85,000 Muslim Balkars. In 1992 the Balkar homeland officially became one of the constituent republics within the Russian Federation. The Balkar people make up the majority of the inhabitants in the republic, but most people in the homeland speak Russian. Although tourism had started to improve the economy, it suffered when war broke out in neighboring Georgia.
In October 2005 there was fighting in the Balkar Republic after an attack on their capital city by Chechen militants. The republic’s mainly Muslim population has become increasingly radicalized by the region’s instability. Visitors around the world would like to visit this beautiful country, but they are afraid of militant attacks, bombings, and general lawlessness. There are a small number of people who follow Christ among the Balkars.

* Pray that God will send His people to the area so that the Muslim Balkars will be introduced to Jesus. * Pray that peace will finally come to the North Caucus region. * Ask the Lord of the harvest to thrust forth many missionaries from Ukraine into North Caucus region to share Christ with the Balkar.

Day 6
Day 6

Chechnya, tucked in the remote valleys of the Caucasus Mountains of southern Russia, is a bed of hot political coals. After years of oppression and suffering, the people rose up against the Russians in 1989. The red-hot political coals have flared into all-out war five times since that date. In 1991 they declared themselves independent, although Russia continues to consider them a prickly, problematic part of their federation.
Chechen terrorism by Islamic fanatics has horrified the world, especially the bombing of a Russian theater with 700 people in it. The Beslen school attack, where more than 300 children were killed, was also a heartless act. They are generally despised and feared by most Russians and called the “Mafia of Russia.”
In their homes and daily lives they practice avoidance, which means that a wife never speaks to her father-in-law, never sits with her husband to eat, must rise when a male enters the room, and must keep her eyes lowered. Chechnya is nearly 100 percent Muslim, and they are the most devout of any Islamic people group in Russia.

* Praise God for the few known Chechen believers. Pray for their nurture, multiplication and protection. * Ask God to speed the translation and distribution of the Bible in their language. * Pray that the Islamic Chechen people will have an opportunity to choose Jesus as their Lord and that Christian broadcasts in the Chechen language will penetrate their land with the gospel.

Day 7
Day 7
Dargin of Ukraine

Eduard stood near his father’s casket. Bitterness and hatred lined his face. He thought, “The Russians killed my father—not with a knife or gun, but they killed him by forcing our family to leave our home in Dagestan years ago. Grandfather was the best silversmith in Dagestan, and everything went well for him. But Father could not learn his father’s craft or adapt to life in Ukraine. He had no reason to live, so he drank himself to death.” Eduard looked at a dagger he had strapped to his side, and thought, “This dagger is the symbol of the Dargin principle of the vendetta. I may not use the dagger, but I will have my revenge on the Russians.”
Eduard is part of the Dargin population that was moved from Dagestan to Ukraine under Soviet orders. Their heart still belongs to Dagestan.
Their ancestors began a slow acceptance of Islam in the 8th century that took centuries to complete. While they claim allegiance to Islam, they practice a religion mixed with many pre-Islamic superstitions. These are reflected in the rite of the first furrow, the spring New Year holiday, the rituals for making and stopping rain, calling out the sun, completing the harvest, and many more.

* Pray that the many Christian ministries springing up in Ukraine will reach out to the Dargins while they are away from their home country. * Pray that the Holy Spirit will dig the first furrow in the soil of Dargin hearts to prepare for faith in Christ.

Day 8
Day 8

The life of the Dungans in Eastern Europe is filled with celebrations, parties, ceremonies, and big events! These people, who originated in China, do not fit the stereotype of serious Muslims. Instead they are a fun, lively people of celebration. To be Dungan is to be joyful, colorful, and hospitable. They love to extend hospitality through ceremonies and banquets. The excitement never stops as they organize beautiful colorful birthday celebrations, weddings, and funerals. Weddings continue to resemble those from the 1800s, which includes the hairstyles of women from that era.
Since they live amongst people who are not Dungan in Eastern Europe, it is important to them to cling to everything that represents their traditions and culture. Embroidery, traditional clothing, silver jewelry, paper cuts of animals, flowers, and tools are displayed in their museums for all to enjoy.
Culture is an important thread that flows through the life of a Dungan. Yet, in this thread something crucial is missing. The missing thread is a relationship with Jesus.

* Pray for God to send Christ’s followers to live among the Dungan people and build relationships with them. * Ask God to open the hearts of the Dungan people who have yet to meet our Savior, Jesus Christ. * Pray that the Dungans will celebrate the King and share Him with others.

Day 9
Day 9
Ingush of Ukraine

Vitaly shook his head. “An accident, huh? The interior minister says that someone ‘accidentally’ shot him, and he was resisting arrest?” “What are you talking about?” Bursa asked her husband, Vitaly. He showed her the letter which detailed the murder of an Ingush journalist who had created an Ingush news website. The journalist was outspoken in publishing Ingush concerns. When he landed at a Russian airport in 2008, he was taken into a government car and shot in the head.
Vitaly and the other Ingush people have a tragic history. They first came under Russian rule in 1810. But it was Josef Stalin, the Soviet dictator, who forced nearly half of their population into exile into Siberia and Kazakhstan where many of them died. After Stalin’s death, the Ingush people were allowed to return to their home in southern Russia, but their lands had been deeded to others, so they were virtually homeless.
Today there are 407,000 Ingush people in Russia and an additional 400 in Ukraine. They are Sunni Muslim, and there are no known evangelicals among them. There have been no efforts to reach them for Christ in Ukraine. At the end of days multitudes will gather around the throne of the Lamb from every people group.

* Pray that there will be many Ingush people around the holy throne. * Pray that God will call workers to the Ingush people both in Russia and in Ukraine. * Pray for Ingush hearts to be prepared to accept the gospel when these workers arrive. Pray that it will be soon.

Day 10
Day 10

The Jakati speaking Jats are primarily located in Russia, and Ukraine, with a few in Afghanistan.
Most Jats are Muslims, Hindus, or Sikhs. (Sikhism is a monotheistic religion that combines elements of Hinduism and Islam.) The Jats living in Pakistan, Russia, and Ukraine are primarily Muslim, while the majority of the Jats in India are Hindu.
The Muslim Jats are Sunnis of the Hanafi school, but are known to have a strong tradition of worshipping many local saints. The Hindu Jats adhere to the traditional practices, as well as a wide variety of additional beliefs and practices. Until recent times, the Sikh Jats seemed to be the least meticulous in their observance of Sikh traditions, leaning more towards Hinduism. Regardless of their religious affiliation, all Jats observe many ceremonies, especially rites of passage such as circumcision and initiation into adulthood.

* Pray that churches will accept the challenge of adopting and reaching the Jats.

Jew of Ukraine
Day 11
Day 11

European Jews are extremely diverse in religious practice. Each Jewish denomination maintains synagogues and celebrates the traditional Jewish holiday calendar. While most European Jews are religiously affiliated, there is a significant minority which is not religious.
In 1989, a Soviet census counted 487,000 Jews living in Ukraine. Although discrimination by the state quickly all but halted after Ukrainian independence in 1991, Jews were still discriminated against in Ukraine during the 1990's. During the 1990’s some 266,300 Ukrainian Jews emigrated to Israel. At present Ukraine contains the fifth-largest Jewish community in Europe and the tenth-largest Jewish community in the world. The majority of Ukrainian Jews live in four large cities: Kiev, Dnepropetrovsk, Kharkiv, and Odessa.
The Jews have a wonderful understanding of their connection with the Abrahamic covenant. However, they also have a history of rejecting Jesus Christ as Messiah, the one who has fulfilled that covenant. Pray that as the Gospel is shared, it will not be viewed as anti-Semitic, but rather as the fulfillment of what God promised through Abraham centuries ago.

Day 12
Day 12

Kabardian of Ukraine

The Kabardins live with violence and instability. Numbering over 520,000 in Russia, they are almost inaccessible due to politics, culture, geography, and linguistic complexity. Yet God wants to reach this Sunni folk-Islamic people with a gospel that can speak to their hearts and give them peace and stability, if only they will let Him!
In the 18th century, a number of Kabardin people in what is now North Ossetia-Alania became Orthodox Christians. Their conversion, however, may have been a “conversion of convenience” for land and status in Czarist Russia. Today’s christian Kabardins need to be studied and discipled.
Despite their enforced uniformity and conservatism, the Kabardins are hospitable, friendly, dependent upon and respectful of God. They sense His sovereignty, although they are ignorant of His grace and agape love. In their shame/honor society, they need to know that Jesus bore their shame on the cross.

* Pray that missionaries will become friends with someone within the Kabardin community who can open their society to Christ’s ambassadors. * Pray for the Bible to be translated into their language. * Pray for revival and discipleship of the christian Kabardins so they can effectively reach out to the Muslim Kabardins. * Pray that both Orthodox and Muslim Kabardins will sense God’s grace and agape love. * Pray that churches will accept the challenge of adopting and reaching the Kabardins.

Day 13
Day 13

Kalmyk is the name given to the Oirats, western Mongols in Russia, whose descendants migrated from Dzhungaria in northwest China in 1607. Today they form a majority in the autonomous Republic of Kalmykia on the western shore of the Caspian Sea. Kalmykia is Europe's only Buddhist government. The Kalmyks are the only nation of Europe of Mongol origin, and the only one whose national religion is Buddhism. They live in the Republic of Kalmykia, a federal subject of the Russian Federation.
Kalmyks embraced Buddhism in the early part of the 17th century and belong to the Tibetan Buddhist sect known as the Gelugpa (Virtuous Way). The Gelugpa are commonly referred to as the Yellow Hat sect. The religion is derived from the Indian Mahayana form of Buddhism. In the West, it is commonly referred to as Lamaism, from the name of the Tibetan monks, the lamas ("heavy with wisdom"). Prior to their conversion, the Kalmyks practiced shamanism.

Day 14
Day 14

Karachi of Ukraine

“You hardly ever sing to the sun anymore, Murad. You seem so sad all the time.” Murad, a Karachi man, responded to his friend with a sigh. “Every week it seems that more Russian troops are moving into our town. Life keeps getting more dangerous. Today they made an order that we could not go to the mosque because the Karachi Jamaat [a Karachi Muslim extremist group] had just bombed a police checkpoint. I wanted to have a nice wedding for my daughter, but we have no money, and the Russians are always watching when we have social gatherings.
With no jobs our young people are becoming restless. We may never have peace.”
The 150,000 Karachi people are the second largest people group in Russia’s Karachai-Cherkessia Republic, and 200 of them also live in neighboring Ukraine. These Turkic people sometimes bring pagan beliefs into their Islamic religion. This can involve putting stones under their houses to keep away bad spirits or singing special songs to bring out the sun or rain. Unfortunately, homegrown Islamic terrorist groups have caused Russia to send troops into their communities. This factor has contributed to the decline of the economic, moral, and social lives of the people. Life is getting worse for these Sunni Muslims.

* Pray that the Lord will move on the hearts of the followers of Christ to reach the Karachi people so they will finally know that true peace is only found through the Prince of Peace, Jesus!

Day 15
Day 15

Turkic-speaking Karaites have lived in Crimea for centuries. Whatever their origin, from the time of the Golden Horde onward, they were present in many towns and villages throughout Crimea and around the Black Sea. On the Crimean Peninsula the Karaites live in the Crimean coastal resort towns, such as Evpatoria, Bahcesaray and Theodosia where they have been assimilated by the Crimean Tatars.
Some modern Karaites seek to distance themselves from being identified as Jews, emphasizing what they view as their Turkic heritage and claiming that they are Turkic practitioners of a "Mosaic religion" separate and distinct from Judaism. They follow only the Tanach, the Jewish Bible, rejecting rabbinic interpretations. They allow each believer to make his/her own interpretation. Unlike most Jewish communities, men and women can exercise authority in their groups. They often prostrate themselves in prayer, which is rare for any Jewish community. In other respects, Karaites tend to adopt the customs of their host country. Since most of them live in Israel, they are starting to assimilate into mainstream society.

Day 16
Day 16

The Kumyk people have a Christian background, but many of those from the upper class were once Jewish! Between the eighth and 12th centuries, Sunni Islam slowly made inroads among them, and they have not looked back. Their Islam, however, includes a number of pre-Islamic and even pre-Christian elements. Indeed, much of their pre-Islamic folklore and social structure persists. Out of some 300,000 Kumyk people, fewer than 40 are followers of Christ.
Their claims to fame are their literary accomplishments and their folklore. Kumyk literature began to develop during the 14th and 15th centuries, and hit its peak at the turn of the 19th century. Even to this day, the Kumyks are highly respected by the neighboring peoples.
The Kumyks are spread out throughout the Muslim regions of southern Russia, including Chechnya and Dagestan. Although they speak a Turkic language, they are probably indigenous to the region, which was annexed by Russia in 1867. Under Russia, their Western Turkic Altaic language has become a minority tongue. They are economically integrated into Russia’s economy, except for those in Chechnya and along the Georgia border due to military occupation.

* Pray for more of the Bible to be available in their language, and for Christian radio broadcasts in the Kumyk language. * Pray for Ukrainian missionaries to evangelize them.

Day 17
Day 17

Yezidi Kurd of Ukraine

Yezidis have been called the worshippers of the Devil. Because of their religious rites the Yezidis were despised by the rest of Kurds and lived in isolation. Kurds-Yezidis are a distinctive ethnic group. Their religion is based on Mazdeism, the dualistic religion of ancient Persians, which incorporates elements of Judaism and Christianity.
Extensive resettlement of Kurds, from Kurdistan into Transcaucasia, started at the beginning of the 19th century, after the incorporation of Transcaucasia into Russia. Relations between the Kurds and the Persian and Turkish authorities had always been extremely bad, the Kurds were cruelly persecuted and exterminated by the thousand (a situation that has not improved even by the end of the 20th century), a situation which led some Kurdish tribes and smaller groups to try and find refuge in Russia.

* Ask the Lord to call Ukrainians who are willing to share the Gospel with the Yezidi Kurds. * Ask God to give the Yezidi Kurd believers opportunities to share the love of Jesus with their own people.

Day 18
Day 18

Increasingly we see God moving people groups away from their traditional homelands. For example, some of the Kyrgyz people of Kyrgyzstan who were formerly nomads are now living in Ukraine, far away from their home country. Many of them long for their former lifestyle. They remember the mountains and grasslands where they herded their animals; they think of their white felt yurts (tents) which could be easily dissembled and moved from place to place. Kyrgyzstan is a far cry from the flat-forested lands of Ukraine and the confining buildings where they now reside. City living can’t compare with the freedom they experienced in Kyrgyzstan as they traveled virtually all year round searching for suitable pastureland.
But Kyrgyzstan offers little opportunity for its people to hear the gospel. The door is closed to missionaries, and it takes a special ministry to reach people who are always on the go. The good news is that Ukraine has been dubbed the “Bible Belt” of the former USSR because of its rich Christian heritage. Churches and Christian resources are available there. Most Kyrgyz people are nominal Muslims still practicing ancestor worship. They do not have any deep roots in their faith. The Kyrgyz people did not accept Islam until about 100 years ago. They now have an opportunity to hear about Jesus.

* Pray for opportunities for them to be set free from the delusions of spirit worship and the false hope of Islam. * Pray that many will come to know the abundant life through Jesus Christ.

Day 19
Day 19

Bitaha smiled as she began to roll the freshly cut herb and cheese mixture into the thin dough. “Watch carefully,” she said to her daughter in Lak, before starting a conversation with a neighbor in Russian. These are only two of the multiple languages the Lak people speak fluently. They are the most multilingual of all the peoples of the former USSR.
The men of the tukhum (the family group) are herding the sheep and goats to lowland pastures for the season, so Bitaha will take the lead in selecting marriage partners for the young people. She will also take part in the Lak planting and harvesting rituals still found among the rural Lak.
Devoutly Muslim, the Lak people enjoy the prestige of being the first among the area peoples who embraced Islam in the seventh century. There are no known followers of Christ among them, and they are completely unreached.

* Pray that the 1,000 Lak people of the Ukrainian mountain valleys will hear and receive the gospel of Christ. * Pray that God will push away untruth and deliver the Way, the Truth, and the Life into every Lak community. * Pray that this multilingual people will take the lead in spreading the news of Jesus to the Muslim peoples of southern Russia and Ukraine.

Day 20
Day 20

Anya sits in a cottage weaving a carpet. She sometimes talks to the other women who are also weaving carpets. When finished, these carpets will fetch a good price at the market.
Anya and her friends are Lezgians, and they live in the high mountains of Georgia. Nearby, Anya’s young son watches a herd of goats as they feed on the rich green grass of the pasture. The goats provide the yarn needed to weave the carpets. Some Lezgian families also raise sheep, horses, and water buffalo.
The Lezgians are a Muslim people group that lives in the mountains of Georgia, Dagestan, and Azerbaijan. They are a hardy people that live in a land of brutally hot summers and bitterly cold winters. The Lezgians practice a very impure form of Islam, for they never completely gave up worshipping the pagan gods they’d worshipped prior to their conversion to Islam. Recently a few Lezgians have found salvation in Jesus Christ, but there aren’t enough of them to form even one fellowship. * Ask God to protect and strengthen the small group of believers within this people group. * Ask God to send missionaries to show the Lezgians that Jesus Christ is better than any other god they currently worship.

Day 21
Day 21

Nogai Khan, the grandson of Genghis Khan and general over what was known as the Golden Horde, once ruled the Nogai people, giving rise to the name of the people group and their language. Like their founder, the Nogai Tatars became famous as warriors.
Most of the Nogai Tatars were expelled from Ukraine in the 19th century. Since that time they have barely managed to escape assimilation. The Nogai language is in decline, and only the older generation consistently speaks it.
Although nearly all Nogai Tatars are Sunni Muslims, their practice of Islam is largely cultural. They are Muslims simply because their ancestors were Muslims. They are also Muslim because they have not been presented with a choice. The gospel has not been preached among the Nogais, and they are an unreached people group.

* Pray for mission organizations to take note of the Nogai Tatars and begin to focus attention on them. * Ask the Lord to raise up workers who will present the good news to them in a way that they will understand and respond to without cultural prejudice. * Pray for the hearts of this people to be soft, fertile soil for the seed of the Word.

Pashtun of Ukraine
Day 22
Day 22

Passionate is a word that well describes much about the Pashtun tribes of Afghanistan. They are said to love or hate with equal intensity, displaying fierce loyalty to friends, yet defending the right of badal - revenge or blood feuds where enemies are concerned. An old proverb reveals much, "He is no Pashtun who does not give a blow for a punch."
The Islamic religion is very difficult to influence. Converts to Christianity will more than likely be banished from their families. Consequently, there has been very little growth of Christianity among the Pashtun. Most of the work by various mission agencies has ended due to unrest in the country. More recently, some of the "freedom fighters" have attacked Western relief agencies, causing them to flee from Afghanistan. Christian radio and television broadcasts are strictly forbidden by the government.

Day 23
Day 23

By definition, Persians (also known as Iranians) are an ethnic group native to Iran. The Persian language, called Farsi, is part of the Indo-Iranian language family, and is the official language of Iran. Dari, the language of the elite in Afghanistan, is a dialect of modern Persian.
Although the vast majority of Persians now live either in Iran or in one of the nearby Middle Eastern countries, small Persian communities can also be found in many other nations around the world. There are roughly 400 living in Ukraine.
Today, most Persians are Shia Muslims of the Ithna Ashari branch, and are radical in their adherence to Islamic laws and principles.
The Islamic world is extremely difficult to influence with the Gospel. Fundamental Muslims are very outspoken, even militant, against Christianity. Much prayer is needed to break down the barriers separating them from the Truth.

* Ask the Lord to call Ukrainian believers to reach out and share the love of Christ with them.

Day 24
Day 24

As the linguist listened to the Tabasaran village elder, he was amazed at their tumultuous history. The Tabasarans live in the Caucasus Mountain region of Dagestan. Perhaps it has been their tenacity and stubbornness that has helped them to repeatedly repel foreign invaders and even refuse the Soviets’ efforts to relocate them out of the highlands and into the lowland towns and collective farms. They simply refused to go! They are considered the original aborigines of the area.
The Tabasarans have been Muslim since the 9th century, but surprisingly there are even traces of early Christian elements in their culture. They live in clan groups in small villages, and today the clans still remain intact. They are skilled artisans, but are suffering unemployment due to industrialization.
The New Testament in their language is completed and was published in 2009 along with a Tabasaran Children’s Bible Story Book. The JESUS Film is available in their language and has had a real impact on many.

* Pray for Holy Spirit led workers for Tabasaran communities. * Pray for strength, courage, and wisdom for the more than 100 Tabasaran believers. * Pray that their natural tenacity will make them faithful ambassadors for Christ throughout the Caucasus Region.

Day 25
Day 25

Tajikistan is the mountainous center of Central Asia, surrounded by the Asian republics of Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Kyrgyzstan. The Tajiks have been repeatedly invaded and conquered, starting with the Greek armies of Alexander the Great, then the Mongols led by Genghis Khan, and later the Turks and the British, and finally the Russians. The numerous invasions have been a major factor in the dispersion of Tajiks to other locations, including Ukraine where 4,000 now live.
Tajiks are a very creative people. They love music and poetry, and even the Qur’an has been put to music. In his book, Eternity in Their Hearts, Don Richardson claims that there is startling evidence of the belief in one true God in hundreds of cultures, and that God has preserved a testimony in every culture that is a key to sharing the gospel message. Music and poetry could be the key to reaching the Tajiks for Christ. Introducing them to the great poet David and his Psalms might have special meaning for the Tajiks. They are a people who are often open to a discussion of spiritual things. They understand the concept of sacrifice that could lead to a redemptive analogy of the Lamb of God being God’s sacrifice for the sins of the world.

* Pray that evangelists targeting the Tajiks in Ukraine will find the cultural keys that can enable the gospel message to ring true in their hearts.

Day 26
Day 26

The Tatar are a group of Turkic people with sizable colonies in virtually every republic of the former Soviet Union. Although most of them live around the Volga region, others inhabit Azerbaijan, Byelorussia, Ukraine, and the Central Asian republics. Volga Tatars began settling in Ukraine at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. Tatar “Sloboda” (villages) emerged in the Donbas region. Tatar people especially after the war quickly started losing their identity. Currently there are over 19,000 Taters in the Donetsk region and 8,500 in the Luhansk region.
Most Tatar are Hanafite Muslim. While Muslims believe that there is only one god, many Tatar still honor saints and holy places. Some beliefs in supernatural powers such as the "evil eye" (the ability to curse someone with a glance) still exist from their pre-Islamic days.
Unfortunately, the Tatar's view of Christianity has been scarred by the Russian Orthodox Church and its attempts to convert them through coercion. During the 1600's and 1800's, their mosques were frequently burned. The few who were "converted" by these measures returned to their Islamic faith when oppression ended.

* Pray that the Lord will raise up loving Ukrainian Christians to share the Gospel message with the Tatar.

Day 27
Day 27

“You do not exist.” That is what the Crimean Tatars were once told. They were called a “non-people” and deported to Central Asia and Siberia by Stalin’s Soviet regime in the 1940s. Nearly 50 percent of the population died from malnutrition and disease. It wasn’t until 1989 that they returned to their homeland. Today, they are a minority group in Ukraine and continue to face discrimination.
Islam reached the Crimean Tatars in the 13th century, and before long, Crimea was one of the centers of Islam. Despite this fact, the majority of the group today is not devout Muslims, and some continue to hold onto ancient beliefs in animism and “the evil eye.”
Most Crimean Tatars in Ukraine reside in cities. Their dress and language make it very difficult to distinguish them from Russians or Ukrainians. Many of their customs and traditions are falling away, especially among the younger generation, putting the Crimean Tatars at risk of losing the attributes that have made them a distinctive people.
But somehow this “non-people” group has survived through the centuries. Only 0.01 percent of the Crimean Tatar population is Christian. The Crimean Tatars are still waiting for the Bible to be translated into their language and for a church to be planted among them.

* Pray for this people group to realize that there is a God who loves them. * Pray for workers to be raised up and sent to the Crimean Tatars to give them His Word and to help them establish a Christ centered fellowship.

Day 28
Day 28

Meskhetian Turks are a group of Turkish-speaking people originally from Meskhetia (now known as Samtskhe-Javakheti), a part of southern Georgia that borders with Turkey. In 1944, the Meskhetian Turks were forcefully deported from the Meskheti region in Georgia and accused of smuggling, banditry and espionage in collaboration with their kin across the Turkish border. Nationalistic policies at the time encouraged the slogan: "Georgia for Georgians" and that the Meskhetian Turks should be sent to Turkey "where they belong". Although Joseph Stalin deported the majority of Meskhetian Turks to Uzbekistan, thousands dying en route in cattle-trucks, in 1989, the Meskhetian Turks living in Uzbekistan became the victims of riots by the ethnic Uzbeks. Today, as a result of deportations and discrimination, Meskhetian Turks are widely dispersed throughout the former Soviet Union.
Approximately 10,000 Meskhetian Turks live in Ukraine. The majority of the Meskhetian Turkish community arrived in Ukraine during 1989-1990 following ethnic persecution in the Ferghana Valley in Uzbekistan; most others immigrated later to re-unite with their relatives. They are concentrated mostly in Crimea, Donetsk, Kherson, and Mykolaiv. A few live in Kiev. Most settled in Ukraine following the Fergana events. In 1991, they were granted Ukrainian citizenship.
Meskhetian Turks are Sunni Muslims. Due to the Soviet Union’s official policy of discouraging religion and promoting atheism, the majority of Meskhetian Turks, like Bosnian Muslims, are not strictly observant Muslims.

Day 29
Day 29

“Wow! Look at this stuff!” commented the Korean tourist to his wife, as they walked through a Turkmen bazaar in Ukraine. “All these utensils and furniture.” “And this carpet here,” his wife remarked. “Isn’t it lovely?”
Such bazaars are common in Turkmen communities. The Turkmen are noted for their hospitality, but they are also known to be argumentative and revengeful. Nearly 3,000,000 Turkmen live in Turkmenistan, while others live in various parts of Central Asia near the Caspian Sea. Only about 3,500 reside in Ukraine.
For centuries the Turkmen lived as nomadic herdsmen. Under Soviet rule their nomadic lifestyle was virtually eliminated. The socialization of farmland changed their traditional settlement patterns, and movement into cities has weakened their customs and traditions.
By the 14th century Islam had replaced Christianity, which had been their faith since the 4th Century. Today there is little awareness of Christianity among them, and less than 1,000 anywhere are followers of Christ. Turkmen churches in Turkmenistan have been closed, and members are told they can’t meet.

* As the Korean tourist and his wife prayed while flying over Ukraine on their way home, so should we pray: ask the Lord to call a people to live among the Turkmen in Ukraine, sharing the love of Christ with them. * Pray that Turkmen believers will preach the gospel without fear and with a calm and gentle spirit.

Uzbek of Ukraine
Day 30
Day 30

First the bad news: gaining independence when the Soviet Union broke up in 1991 did not bring freedom from tyranny to Uzbekistan, a former Soviet Socialist Republic. Uzbekistan is a multiparty republic in name only. The growing Islamist movement has been vigorously quashed, and Christians have also been affected by government legislation and actions. The autocratic president is in full control, and there is no freedom of speech or press in Uzbekistan.
Many Uzbeks have sought refuge or political asylum in other countries. Twelve thousand of them live in Ukraine. However, the Ukrainian Refugee Council which monitors the treatment of refugees has been alarmed at the abuses of the Uzbeks in Ukraine. Many of them have been extradited to Uzbekistan where there is widespread use of torture, specifically against people convicted on charges of anti-governmental activities or forbidden religious activity. The council stresses that it is impermissible to extradite asylum seekers to Uzbekistan, as it constitutes a violation of national and international law.
Now the good news! For the first time there is a completely translated Bible in the Uzbek language. Central Asian Bible Media has also accomplished the task of making it electronically available so that it can be downloaded on a computer or cell phone.

* Pray that the King of glory would come in and reign in the hearts of Uzbek peoples. * Pray that missionaries would be sent out to present a biblically based and culturally relevant witness for Uzbeks.

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