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  A letter from John and Martha Butt in Thailand  
             
 

February 16, 2007
Chinese New Year

Dear Friends and Family:

We send you our holiday greetings and best wishes for a healthy and peaceful new year. Thailand had its share of troubles in 2006, but we are all hoping that things will improve in the year of the pig!

Many concerned friends contacted us last September when they heard about the military coup here. Most people around the world thought that Thailand was moving toward becoming a full-fledged constitutional democracy and that military coups were a thing of the past. Having witnessed several government takeovers during our time in Thailand, we must say that this coup was different. This time there was strong support for the takeover by many prominent Thai leaders as well as by many of the common people. Time will tell whether or not it was the right thing to happen.

Our life in Chiang Mai continues to be fulfilling. We have had so many wonderful opportunities to learn, to share, to travel, to meet good people of all nationalities and faiths. We have also been fortunate to have the love and support of our family and friends both in Thailand and in America. We are thankful to God for providing us with such abundant lives.

Although John has now taught for over 40 years, he continues to enjoy the challenge of getting students to think critically about their religious beliefs. The international M. Div. program will graduate its first group of students this year. It has been exciting for us to see the intellectual and spiritual growth of the students enrolled in that program. The graduates from Vietnam and Burma will go back home in May with their new degrees to work with Christian congregations and seminaries. They are a truly remarkable group of young leaders. Payap University continues to need financial support for students from neighboring countries to study in this important program.

John is also working on preparations for the upcoming conference on “Religion and Culture” that will be held at Payap the last week of June 2007. This conference will bring together scholars and religious leaders from around the world for six full days of discussion and dialogue about how “culture” and “religion” are understood and related in their religious communities. Representatives from the Christian, Buddhist, Islamic, Hindu, and other religious traditions will be participating. The Institute for the Study of Religion and Culture, Payap University, would welcome contributions for 20 scholarships of 600 dollars for participants (five from each faith group and five at large) from less-developed countries who will need financial assistance to attend the conference.

Recent highlights from my work have been the opening of Payap University’s “Paradorn-parb International House” and the establishment of the “Research and Human Resource Development Centre” in Kunming, China. The latter is supported and operated jointly by Payap University and the Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences. The International House is home to both foreign and Thai students who want to share their lives and cultures with each other while studying at Payap University.

Last October, I tripped while walking on the Payap University campus and broke two bones in my ankle. After surgery to repair the damage, I was ordered to stay off of my foot for two months! Many of you know that I am not generally someone who (1) sits very much or (2) spends many hours at home. In this condition, I gained a greater awareness of my environment and the obstacles to getting around in a wheel chair and on crutches. (And there are many such obstacles in Thailand, where handicap accessibility is neither stressed nor required.) I truly admire people who have mastered physical challenges. And I thank those, especially John and my office staff, who helped me during this time when I had to be so dependent.

We are beginning to plan for 2007, our final year of service with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). We will be retiring at the end of December. We will spend September through December in the United States where we will visit churches to talk about our work in Thailand over the past 40 years. We are especially eager to let people know how Thailand has changed (or not changed) during that period. For Presbyterians receiving this letter, please let us know if you would like us to visit your congregation. John will spend the month of October assigned to four different presbyteries as part of a major mission speaking tour, but the other months (September, November and December) are open for us both. We are tentatively planning to spend the first two months on the East Coast near our daughter, and the last two months in California near our son.

On a personal note, my mother celebrated her 97th birthday with us in Chiang Mai in January. She has been living here for nearly three years now. We had lots of family here for the Christmas holidays, and that brought joy to all of us. Our daughter, Chanya, and her two boys will spend the month of July here. They were unable to come for Christmas, but our son Paul and his wife Julie and son Jesse were with us for the holidays.

Thank you for your interest and support in our lives and work. We hope that we will have the opportunity to see many of you during 2007.

Sincerely,

Martha and John Butt

The 2007 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 119

 
             
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