Audio By Carbonatix
An American Instagram adventurer and evangelist who was killed by members of an isolated tribe after trespassing on their island left behind a journal detailing his intention to convert the community to Christianity.
John Allen Chau, 26, was shot with an arrow last week on the remote North Sentinel Island in the Bay of Bengal, home to the tiny Sentinelese tribe, which for centuries has rejected all contact with the outside world. The tribe is heavily protected under Indian law, which bans all visits to North Sentinel.
“God Himself was hiding us from the Coast Guard and many patrols,” Chau wrote of his journey to the island in a diary that he left with fishermen who ferried him there. Chau’s mother later passed the pages, along with notes to his family, to The Washington Post.
“Lord, is this island Satan’s last stronghold where none have heard or even had the chance to hear your name?” he wrote in one of the pencilled diary entries.
Chau described his interactions with the tribe on several visits he had made to the island before his fatal trip.
“I hollered, ‘My name is John, I love you and Jesus loves you,’” he wrote, describing some Sentinelese men as being five-foot-five and wearing yellow paste on their faces. Chau tried to speak their language and sign “worship songs” to the tribe, eliciting angry reactions, The Post reports.
Chau claimed that an arrow shot by a teenage member of the tribe had pierced the water-proof bible he was carrying. But a final note he wrote to his family suggests he had resolved to continue despite the risks. “You guys might think I’m crazy in all this but I think it’s worthwhile to declare Jesus to these people,” he wrote in his last note to his family on November 16. “God, I don’t want to die,” he added.
Towards the end of the diary, Chau asked God to forgive “any of the people on this island who try to kill me, and especially if they succeed.”
Local fishermen told police they had seen tribe members dragging Chau’s body along the beach and burying it.
Medical experts have expressed concern that the body could expose the Sentinelese, whose isolation has left them with no immunity to common modern diseases, to potentially deadly pathogens. Indian authorities believe the Sentinelese only number in the dozens.
Seven people have been arrested on suspicion of helping Chau reach the island.
Latest Stories
-
I have supported highway authority financially to fix roads in my constituency – A Plus
29 minutes -
US, Iran fail to reach peace agreement after marathon talks in Pakistan
52 minutes -
ECG kicks off Phase Two of transformer upgrades at Lashibi; brief outages expected
1 hour -
Port crises loom as 11,000 drivers threaten four-day strike
2 hours -
A source of excellence across generations – Vice President Opoku-Agyemang lauds Mfantsipim
3 hours -
(Photos) Mfantsipim School launches historic 150th anniversary
4 hours -
Knights and Ladies of Marshall group backs Catholic Bishops’ stance on anti-LGBTQ+
4 hours -
Bright Simons writes: All the Filla in the Ibrahim Mahama/E&P – Gold Fields Saga
5 hours -
Monetise Idiocy In Ghana
5 hours -
The Ghanaian prophet and the mysterious death of his scottish wife Charmain Speirs
6 hours -
Nearly 400 sentenced in Nigeria for links to militant Islamists
6 hours -
Ghana’s recovery supported by gold strength despite global oil price pressures – Standard Bank Research
6 hours -
Methodist Church hails Mfantsipim@150; calls for “fresh consecration” to excellence
7 hours -
‘Excellence is our inheritance’ – Nana Sam Brew-Butler hails Mfantsipim’s 150-year reign in leadership
7 hours -
Kwaku Azar writes: A-G vs OSP
7 hours