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When Jean drove his nephew into Beirut earlier that evening, he saw the
Lebanese Army had sent troops into the area. When they returned home around
10:45 p.m., Jean, an officer in the army, checked with his base to ask
what was happening; he was told there was no problem.
But there was a big problem.
Suddenly, they heard a bomb blast and shooting. Sarah was terrified.
Jean again called his base.
Whats happening up here? he asked. He was told to stand
by. After hearing more shooting he called the base again.
Dont worry. Its probably just people celebrating,
they said.
No! This is heavy weapons fire! Jean protested.
More shooting. Closer. Jean called the base a third time.
Something is not right! Im in the army and I know what Im
hearing! he said. But the official he spoke with refused to take
action.
By now villagers were calling around trying to find out what was happening.
Jean went out onto his second-story balcony and heard movement near his
house.
Then, he saw them30 heavily armed menterrorists, some right
in the front of his house.
Whos there? he called. Were in the army,
one of them responded. Get back inside!
Jean knew they were lying. His first impulse was to shoot at them. He
pulled out a pump-action shotgun, but Sarah begged him not to shoot.
Someone knocked at the front door. He called his base a final time.
Theyre knocking at my front door! Thank you very much!
he screamed, and hung up.
He switched off the lights. He moved with Sarah and her mother into
an unfinished back room.
Then, through a patio door, Jean saw someone pulling the pin, preparing
to throw a grenade. He shouted for Sarah and her mother to lie flat on
the floor.
Other terrorists shot into the front door and broke it open. Jean watched
them through an interior door he cracked. They wore masks and fake beards.
Jean turned back toward the man with the grenade and fired his shotgun.
The blast was deafening.
He again turned toward the interior door. As he did, one of the terrorists
shoved an automatic rifle through the doorway spraying the room with bullets.
Selwah was killed instantly. One bullet hit Sarah in the chest. I
am dying! she said and kissed Jean.
Jean was shot in an arm and a leg, but he stood and fired his shotgun
again, killing the man entering the room.
Abruptly the telephone rang. It was Jeans brother, calling to
check on them. Dont call again! one of the terrorists
screamed and hung up the phone.
Several minutes of silence, then another man entered the darkened room.
Jean fired again, killing a third terrorist.
As more rebels came into the house, they found the bodies of their comrades.
In the confusion and darkness they began screaming and firing their weapons,
shooting each other.
Jean recalls clearly the attackers names: Mustafa! Samir!
And he remembers the wounded groaning.
For 15 minutes confusion reigned. The terrorists were afraid to enter
the back room where Jean crouched over his wife.
Sarah was struggling to breathe. Jean whispered to her and shook her.
A death rattle came from her throat. He tried to keep her quiet and prayed
that someone would come to help.
Finally, as minutes slipped past, he realized Sarah was dead. And with
her, their child.
Slipping onto the patio, he dropped 10 feet to the ground, clutching
his shotgun, struggling to move with his wounded arm and leg. He headed
toward a neighbors house some 45 feet away.
At first they thought Jean was one of the terrorists and almost opened
fire on him. Then they began firing toward the rebels to give Jean a chance
to get into the house.
Amid more shooting, Jean made his way to his uncles house where
family members bound up his arm and took him to a hospital.
Finally the Lebanese Army appeared. The terrorists holed up in Jeans
house held two soldiers hostage they had taken prisoner earlier that evening.
The terrorists promised to surrender them in exchange for safe passage
to a camp inside Syria.
The army refused.
Later they would learn that one hostage, a Muslim, was allowed to escape
through a back window. But they slit the throat of the second hostage,
a Maronite Catholic.
The soldiers trained cannons on Jeans home, firing round after
round until it was destroyed. One support beam was left standing. A house
next door belonging to Jeans brother was also destroyed.
As the homes were reduced to rubble, some of the terrorists ran out,
firing their weapons wildly.
For the next two days, they were rounded up or killed as the army swept
the area. One was found hiding near the house several days later, one
leg shot completely away.
Amid the ruins of Jeans house, authorities found Sarahs
diary and her Bible. The Bible was marked with a single drop of blood
from one of the terrorists.
In the aftermath of the carnage, it was revealed the attack was part
of a plot. The terroristssome trained by fundamentalist Muslims
in Afghanistanhad planned to kill every Christian in Kfar-Habou.
They had crept through the hills from Syria into the area and established
a base in a water tank on a hill overlooking the village. For weeks they
hauled in weapons and ammunition for their attack.
Kfar-Habou is surrounded by three dozen Muslim villages. Once the attack
began, Muslim villagers were expected to help in the mass murder of thousands
of Christians.
Learning of the plot, the Lebanese Army sent some 4,000 soldiers into
the area. But it was learned later that Muslims within the army sympathetic
to the plot impeded its efforts.
The fighting at Jeans house undoubtedly saved many lives. A mob
of Muslim villagersarmed with knives and farm implementswere
headed toward the village, but turned back when they heard the fierce
fighting.
In the days that followed, authorities discovered the true dimensions
of the attack. Workers collected two truckloads of spent shells and ammunition
around Jeans house.
Elsewhere, a Baptist church in West Beirut got a bomb threat. Terrorists
entered the Russian Embassy and killed two people. And a nun was raped
and killed.
In the weeks that followed, Muslims in Tripoli circulated fliers calling
for Jean to be prosecuted for killing the terrorists at his house.
The attack has been called the worst since the Lebanese civil war ended
more than 10 years ago. Southern Baptist workers say peace prevails for
the most part in Lebanon now, but this attack illustrates the depth of
faith-related problems that still existand the peoples pressing
need for the good news of Jesus Christ.
Two days after the attack, Sarahs funeral was held at Fahr-Habou
Baptist Church. Muslim and Christian leaders alike attended the service.
The Baptist pastor stood and preached from the book of Job. He talked
about how the Lord gives and the Lord takes away. Then he gave the plan
of salvationthat there is no hope in eternity without personal faith
in Jesus Christ.
He spoke about how the Bible instructs Christians to pray for government
leaders, not to retaliate.
He wept openly as he talked of Sarahs life in the Lord.
The church asked a Syrian believer to pray. He also presented the gospel,
through prayer, and even prayed for those who killed Sarah and her mother.
Shocked newspaper writers reported widely how these Baptist Christians
had actually prayed for their attackers.
I know pearls come from bleeding shells, says Felicity,*
a member of the Baptist church. I am asking for a greater pearl
to come from this bleeding shell.
Sarah was a great believer, a moving force behind some of us who
knew her.
One man who had drifted from the church returned after that day and
is again a faithful member. Some Muslims have come to faith in Christ,
though most are afraid to attend church services.
Today Jeans house is still only partially rebuilt. The government
gave him only $20,000 in reparations, not nearly enough to pay for the
reconstruction.
As he talks about the death of his wife, he does not seem bitter. But
as he leaves the house, he picks up his automatic pistol and tucks it
into a back pocket.
*Name has been changed for security reasons.

Above Jean, a Baptist layman, describes how the terrorist attack on
his village unfolded. In the background is his house. It was destroyed
in the fighting and he is rebuilding it. It is where his wife, unborn
child and mother-in-law died. Jeans quick actions probably kept
his entire village from being destroyed.
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