OMS Outreach September-December 2014 | Page 22

Molotov Cocktails Ukraine and By Randy Marshall, Missionary in Ukraine, One Mission Society Prayer in Pastor Vadim’s voice had a touch of fear when he called me one evening in early December to request prayer for Ukraine. “The riot police are getting ready to clear Maidan” (Kiev’s central square), my friend told me. “Something could happen in the middle of the night.” Pastor Vadim feared for the many protestors who had come out in force to stand in Independence Square—protestors who initially demanded the government change its mind about canceling proposed trade agreements with the European Union but later demanded the president’s resignation and a movement away from corruption and toward the rule of law. There was concern that the government would use force to oust the peaceful protestors and that people would be hurt or even killed. So, Pastor Vadim asked me to send emails to all our Christian friends in the U.S. and the world, requesting prayer for Ukraine. Although the protest movement, located about 20 minutes from our apartment by metro, had sprung up a couple of weeks earlier, it didn’t seem dangerous to me until that moment. So, we prayed and got others praying, and thankfully nothing significant happened that night. But that was the beginning of a tense standoff and even tug-of-war between the government and the protestors that lasted more than three months. It led to massive rallies on Sundays—rallies that competed with our Sunday meetings, leading to a drop in participation in our events. It led to physical conflicts between police and protestors, which included incidents of 22