Lumeya appointed to DR Congo government position

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Prayer requested for first MB to serve at ministry level

CL news story with files from ICOMB prayer update Lumeya

Maleghi Lumeya has recently been appointed Ministre des affaires foncières or Minister of Land (Property) by the Democratic Republic of Congo. Lumeya, pictured right, who has served as a national congressman, is the first Mennonite Brethren to serve at this level of government in DR Congo.  

“Serving in the political arena is like being a Good Samaritan,” says Lumeya, the son of a Mennonite Brethren pastor and an attorney by profession. “It’s an opportunity for the poor to see the hand of God.”

Nzash Lumeya, Maleghi’s brother who lives in Fresno, Calif., is asking Mennonite Brethren around the world to pray for Maleghi as he strives to influence the decisions being made in DR Congo.

“Maleghi and his wife, Lyly, confess Jesus Christ as their personal Savior and Lord,” says Nzash in an email to the CL. “They belong to the Mennonite Brethren church in Congo. Humility and wisdom are much needed as they serve ‘as unto the Lord’ in our beloved country.”

In a recent phone conversation with David Wiebe, executive director of the International Community of Mennonite Brethren, Nzash explains his brother’s new assignment: Many people in Congo are homeless and even refugees because sometimes bureaucrats look the other way when business owners or thugs overtake properties. Maleghi wants to elevate the level of justice and exercise of the law to protect land owners. His job will be to administer properties, assist those who are under pressure of potentially losing their land, and of course to collect taxes owing on property. Nzash reports that Maleghi wants to "help people learn to live together in the villages," a clear reference to the difficulties in rural communities of Congo.

In an email to the CL, Nzash says, “According to Maleghi, 70 percent of conflict cases before the national Congolese courts are related to properties and deeds. Please, pray for discernment and justice.”

DR Congo is currently led by President Joseph Kabila, who was supposed to complete his presidential term in 2016 but continues to hold office. He had agreed to hold elections sometime this year (2017) but that has not happened due to a lack of funds. In April Kabila appointed Bruno Tshibala, a former leading member of the main opposition coalition, as the prime minister. A new transitional government, of which Maleghi Lumeya is a member, was sworn into office May 18. The new prime minister has said that holding an election in 2018 is one of his goals, along with improving the economy, living conditions and security.

Nzash Lumeya identifies an interesting path connecting a number of North American Mennonite Brethren leaders with Maleghi’s vision for political involvement, says Wiebe of ICOMB. In 2003 Elmer Martens, former president and faculty member at Fresno Pacific Biblical Seminary, connected Nzash with John Redekop, a Canadian church leader, author and professor of political science professor at University of Waterloo who also served as a city councillor in Abbotsford, BC.

Redekop, who has authored scores of articles on public policy, taught in Kinshasa in 2003, a very dangerous time for DR Congo. While in Kinshasa Redekop found himself trapped in a home compound for a day while shooting and chaos prevailed in the streets nearby. In his lectures, which Maleghi attended, Redekop taught principles for political involvement and shared his vision for Christian involvement in politics. At the time, Redekop’s seminar was appreciated by Muslims and Christians alike and inspired Maleghi to develop his own vision for political involvement.

Redekop’s ideas concerning Christian engagement in politics continues to influence leaders in the Congo. His book “Politics Under God,” published in 2006 by Menno Media, has been translated and printed in French in DR Congo. In this book, Redekop affirms politics as an appropriate arena of Christian service to the extent permitted by Christian discipleship.

To learn more about Lumeya's involvement in government and politics, read this CL news story.

 

 

           

 

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