Missionaries forced to leave tribes

Published: Monday, Feb. 13 2006 9:21 a.m. MST

U.S. missionary Dave Rodman, shown last fall, and his wife are among 40 missionaries expelled from their Venezuelan outposts.

Fernando Llano, Associated Press

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CARACAS, Venezuela — As their plane engine started, two American missionaries looked back at the Joti Indians watching from the grassy airstrip — an abrupt and bitter goodbye after nearly three decades in Venezuela's Amazon rain forest.

Susan and Dave Rodman were among some 40 missionaries who pulled out of their remote outposts ahead of a Sunday deadline from President Hugo Chavez, who has accused the U.S.-based New Tribes Mission of spying for the CIA and exploiting indigenous communities.

Denying any wrongdoing, the missionaries have gathered in an eastern city and are wondering what comes next — for themselves and the tribes.

"My heart is torn," Susan Rodman said Friday from Puerto Ordaz, where the missionaries have moved into a guesthouse and acquaintances' homes. "We knew one day we'd have to leave, but we didn't want it to be so abrupt."

Rodman, 57, spent more than half her life with the Joti Indians, who speak no Spanish and have little concept of money. Raised in Wisconsin and Brazil, Rodman said she and her husband are unsure what to do next.

They left their outpost earlier this month, and New Tribes flew its last two missionaries out of their jungle camp on Thursday.

Marg Jank — a 67-year-old Canadian who spent 44 years with the Yanomami Indians — said the tribe handed her its last stash of bolivar bills so she could send a final shipment of cornmeal, rice and other staples from the nearest city.

Jank left most of her belongings in the simple home that she offered to a Yanomami family, taking her computer and printer to finish her translation of the Bible into the Yanomami tongue.

Chavez said that the indigenous people will be better off without the missionary group, based in Sanford, Fla. He accuses the group of collecting "strategic information" for the CIA and spying for foreign mining and pharmaceutical interests in isolated, mineral-rich tracts of Venezuela.

The government has not backed up the accusations with evidence.

Chavez, who often accuses the United States of plotting against him, said Friday the government would take over the abandoned missions from "that organization of imperialist penetration" and was investing in airplanes, communications equipment and other supplies to provide water and electricity to the tribes.

Chavez has also accused the missionaries of destroying indigenous cultures by proselytizing — criticism Jank acknowledged was tougher to counter.

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