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God Grew Tired of Us
Message
From
27/10/2008 09:19:14
 
 
To
27/10/2008 07:33:17
General information
Forum:
News
Category:
Articles
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01357259
Message ID:
01357330
Views:
12
>I did not post this in the politics section. I did not post it for political reasons. Set aside the politics and look at the great human courage, perseverence, and strength that these boys have. Then consider the others.
>
>Please don't politicize this thread. Despite your political posts, I know you to be a charitable person, so I would hope you would look at it through those eyes. The film is a documentary. The film intentionally left politics out of it, the synopsis is only provided for background in order to provide the information as to why the boys were on the run on their own trying to survive in a war-torn environment where all boys were being murdered.

Tracy, you are quite right, but there is also a looming danger for the world in this story. If it happened there, it can happen anywhere. Their pattern seems to be: As a population of muslims grows in an area, the more they want to convert those around them. If there is no conversion they often proceed to persecute what they see as opposition to their demands. It is a very strange behavior that allows no peace with it's friends and neighbors.

>
>
>
>>Another good example of how Muslims treat Christians.
>>
>>
>>>Please watch the film and when the film is over, watch the special feature "Finding the Lost Boys"
>>>
>>>http://www.godgrewtiredofus.com/about.html
>>>
>>>http://www.godgrewtiredofus.com/
>>>
>>>http://www.netflix.com/Movie/God_Grew_Tired_of_Us/70043819
>>>
>>>http://www.amazon.com/God-Grew-Tired-John-Bul/dp/B000R8YC22
>>>
>>>In 1987, Sudan's Muslim government pronounced death to all males in the Christian south: 27,000 boys fled to Ethiopia on foot. In 1991, they were forced to flee to Kenya; 12,000 survived to live in a U.N. camp in Kakuma. Archival footage documents the 1,000 mile flight; we see life in the camp. We follow three young men who repatriate to the U.S. John Bul Dau goes to Syracuse, and by the film's end, becomes a spokesperson for the Lost Boys and Lost Girls of Sudan; Daniel Abol Pach and Panther Bior go to Pittsburgh. All work several jobs, send money back to the camp, search for relatives lost in the civil war, acclimatize to the U.S., seek an education, and miss their homeland
>>>
>>>If you are interested:
>>>
>>>http://www.johndaufoundation.org/
I ain't skeert of nuttin eh?
Yikes! What was that?
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