Chet Bitterman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Protestant
missions
to Latin America
Latin America

Background
Christianity
Protestantism
History of Central America
History of South America
The Roman Catholic Church and Colonialism
History of Christian missions

People
Ashbel Green Simonton
James Thompson
Allen Gardiner
Henry Pratt
Cyrus Scofield
Henry Grattan Guinness
William Cameron Townsend
Joy Ridderhof
Auca Martyrs
Rachel Saint
Chet Bitterman

Missionary agencies
South American Missionary Society
Wycliffe Bible Translators
Central American Mission
American Bible Society
TEAM
HCJB
Regions Beyond Missionary Union
Mission Aviation Fellowship

Latin American Protestants
Luis Palau
Mincaye

This box: view  talk  edit

Chet Bitterman (c. 1953-1981) was an American linguist and missionary who was kidnapped and killed by revolutionaries of the 19th of April Movement (M-19) in Colombia in 1981.

Originally from Pennsylvania, Bitterman attended Columbia Bible College in South Carolina, where he first heard of the Christian mission organization Wycliffe Bible Translators. After graduation, he received linguistics training from the Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL) in North Dakota, and married Brenda Gardner, a fellow alumna of SIL's training program. Together, they traveled to Colombia to begin mission work with Wycliffe in 1979.

As an inexperienced missionary, Bitterman was not immediately assigned to a tribal group where he could begin to translate the Bible into a new language as many Wycliffe missionaries do. Instead, he worked primarily at Wycliffe's base in Lomalinda, first working in the radio tower and later serving as security coordinator. Their time at Lomalinda was broken up by a six-month service trip in Bogotá where Bitterman and his wife assisted a more experienced translator couple. However, by 1981, plans began to fall into place for Bitterman and his wife to attempt to reach the Carijona tribe in the Colombian jungle.

But at 6:30 a.m. on January 19, 1981, seven M-19 guerrillas entered the Bitterman's home. Not finding the director of SIL, they kidnapped Bitterman instead. Several days later, the guerillas demanded that Wycliffe leave the country. Finally, 48 days after his abduction, on March 7, 1981, Bitterman's body was found in a bus near Bogotá, having been shot in the chest.

There was found an entry in Chet's journal written nearly 2 years before his death that read. "The situation in Nicaragua is getting worse. If Nicaragua falls, I guess the rest of Central America will too. Maybe this is just some kind of self-inflicted Martyr complex, but I find this reoccurring thought that perhaps God will call me to be martyred in His service in Colombia. I am willing."

[edit] References

[edit] Further reading

  • Estes, Steve (1990). Called to die: The story of American linguist Chet Bitterman, slain by terrorists. Wycliffe. ASIN B00072UJ4I.