Ha! That would be awesome hahahahahahahahaha, the Down Under Shortbus. We'll wear helmets to keep from hurting ourselves
As far as Wcyliffe goes, I'll go ahead and copy-paste a bit of wikipedia to try sum up most efficiently the most basic details:
'Wycliffe Bible Translators' is an interdenominational organization mandated to making a translation of the Bible in every living language in the world, especially for cultures with little existing Christian influence. Wycliffe was founded in 1942 by William Cameron Townsend and is associated with the Protestant section of Christianity. There are currently branches in over 50 countries. The organization is named after John Wycliffe, who was responsible for the first complete English translation of the whole Bible into Middle English. As of September 2010, translations of either portions of the Bible, the New Testament, or the whole Bible exist in over 2,500 of the 6,860 languages used on Earth.
That about sums it up. Wycliffe has some good points. They don't generally go there to deliberately try convert the heathens, they want them to have the bible available to them if they are so inclined. They try stay neutral with tribes, they try work with anye xisting churches, they do some incredible linguistic work that helps preserve the native language of the people.
My parents were/are bible translators. They ended up working with a language that had never been written down, so they went in as linguists, not preachers, learned the language, gave it a phonetic alphabet, and then started teaching people to read it. They helped set up some basic schools to teach kids to read in their own language, and then created some basic reading primers that people could buy very, very cheaply to practice reading. They also set up sunday school lessons at local churches, and taught people to teach their own people how to do this.
These are all very good things.
Wycliffe works... omg, so many places. I know Ukarumpa is considered their largest mission base, and it at least used to be the largest mission base int he world. Their international headquarters are in singapore, their US headquarters are in (surprise, surprise) Orlando, Florida. For a long time Wycliffe was a single organization, but now they're a global network of organizations that work in various parts of the world and with varying purposes. IE: SIL (Summer Institute of Linguistics) trains linguists to work overseas. JAARS (Jungle Aviation And Radio Services) does most of the technical stuff with commuications and flying us various places.
It is a primarily protestant organization, with a number of things you have to sign that you agree with before they allow you to work, but I know they *are* genuinely supportive of a number of different denominations (this has caused occasional conflict within ukarumpa). I know they also do fairly extensive backgroudn checks, and up until the 21st century, they were considered to ahve some of the best member care in missions. I... still find this fairly laughable.
More to come.