Great River People

  • Pre-Entry
  • Pre-Evangelism
  • Evangelism
  • Discipleship
  • Phase-Out
  • Completed

About the People

About 230,000 Great River People border the Mekong River and live near Southeastern Asia’s major cities, such as Phnom Penh. Extremely poor, they survive by farming, fishing, building boats, metalwork and light commerce. Their bamboo homes are elevated to protect against flooding, and their diet consists of fish, rice and vegetables. Because so many men were killed in the 1970s, the Great River People’s line of descent is now traced through the women. The rural Great River People practice folk Islam, mixing veneration of the dead with magic and Muslim tradition (a blend of Animism and Islam). Outside efforts to promote Islam have stepped up recently, and the Great River People define themselves more by their religion than their historical origins. There are no known churches or scriptures among this people group.

The Great River People are an unreached Muslim people group in Southeast Asia, numbering around half a million. The opportunity for them to hear about the Savior and His truth for these last days is now! Muslim missionaries from overseas are seeking to make them more orthodox.

About the Project

Since the first millennium A.D., when advanced civilizations of the present-day country in Southeast Asia populated the area, this Asian country has had a checkered history. A protectorate of France for nearly 100 years and a monarchy on and off since 1953, this Southeast Asia region has been decimated by decades of civil war and corruption. An estimated 1.5 to 3 million were killed during Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge reign when money, medicine, religion and education all but disappeared.

Bordered by Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, and the Gulf of Thailand, the nearly 70,000 square-mile country is 95 percent Buddhist (mostly Khmer people), three percent Islam (mostly Great River People), and only two percent are Christian. Textiles and tourism provide most of the hard currency. This region’s temperatures range from 50-100 degrees Fahrenheit. The wet season (May-October) and dry season (November-March) are both ushered in by tropical monsoons.

As our missionaries convey that we are people of faith—through simple prayer ministry, spiritual conversations and kindness—they gain people’s confidence and, by God’s grace, win their hearts for Jesus. The goal is to plant groups of believers who can spread this message throughout the entire people group.

One of the keys to reaching the Great River people is health ministry. By using simple health remedies, assisting the sick to find organizations able to help, and through the work of short-term medical teams, AFM missionaries have won many people’s confidence and hope to begin a small health clinic to meet the overwhelming need better. The Great River people have a tremendous desire to learn English, and teaching English to elementary-age students is an avenue to reach these people. Plans include expanding classes for older learners in the future.

People-Group Facts

  • Population: 230,000
  • Trade Language: Khmer
  • Religion: 88% Islam, 10% Hindu.

Frontier Stories

Farewell Snapshots

As Philip and I flip through our photos, our minds wander back to the challenges faced when we first came to work amongst the Great River People. Here are a few of our snapshots:

By: Greg & Molly Timmins
March 01 2011, 8:50 am | Comments 0

Adrift

A blue boat sped toward us from the shore as our bamboo chinock pulled by a canoe with an outboard motor drifted down the murky river.

By: Philip Kiwi
January 01 2011, 4:25 pm | Comments 0

Speaking to the Heart

“G’day mate, how are you doing?”

By: Philip Kiwi
November 01 2010, 5:27 pm | Comments 0

Yesumeen

He couldn’t move. He couldn’t open his eyes. His heart seemed to have stopped.

By: Hope Kiwi
October 01 2010, 5:24 pm | Comments 0

Miyah

“Come in. Come in and sit down,” Philip said as Ali and his wife came to visit. I was busy teaching our children in a room under the house, but I knew the conversation was likely to turn to spiritual matters.

By: Hope Kiwi
September 01 2010, 5:20 pm | Comments 0

The Great Tree

“I’m sick,” moaned the queen. “And it is all because of that tree.” She pointed to a majestic, ancient tree towering above the palace.

By: Hope Kiwi
August 01 2010, 3:32 pm | Comments 0

Implications

“So, do you want to enter Islam, or don’t you?” the man sitting across the table from me asked impatiently. I felt several pairs of eyes burning into me as I looked up from my meal of rice…

By: Philip Kiwi
July 01 2010, 3:27 pm | Comments 0

Keeping up Appearances

There is only one way to satisfy our Heavenly Father and be in harmony with Him…

By: Hope Kiwi
June 01 2010, 3:25 pm | Comments 0

Ali

Ali called me. “I have been reading the Bible,” he said excitedly, “and I only have 30 pages left!”

By: Philip Kiwi
May 01 2010, 3:22 pm | Comments 0

Tears for Lava

Grief overwhelmed me. I tried to hold my tears back, but I could not.

By: Hope Kiwi
April 01 2010, 3:21 pm | Comments 0

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