Hello, my name is Dan. I went to Mamou boarding school which was operated by the C&MA mission society in Guinea, in West Africa, for scores of years in the middle 20th century. I was sent there at the age of 7, and attended off-and-on from 1956-1962. When I was sent there, the houseparents were Jane and Delmer Smith. After many years of silence, some of the other MK's who went there were able to unite and confront the C&MA (I understand they may have changed their name - can't recall what the new name is). I had cut myself off completely from the mission world but was contacted by these other MK's and was able to testify in an official investigation by independent professionals in the mid '90's. They found and certified physical, sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse by the Smiths as well as other houseparents. The Smiths never acknowledged any fault on their part, and as far as I know, were not disciplined as agreed to by the mission society; they were supposed to get "counseling" and if they did not "repent" they were supposed to lose their pension at some point (as I recall). Mamou was a hell-hole and a nightmare for scores of us (but not all MK's who went there were traumatized as I was). It warped my personality. It was the only big trauma in my life. I had loving parents who were devoted missionaries. I blame it for my lack of academic success (I have a high IQ but dropped out of college) and the failure of my marriage with negative effects on my son's development. Many of us survivors have re-connected on facebook at a site called "Remembering Mamou" (access restricted to alumni). We have been sharing our stories for a couple of years and discussing important issues on the fb site; it has been good for us, especially learning we are not alone (many others, like me, had lost contact with the mission world). Personally I now believe that missions should NOT be organized as institutions at all. When people feel inspired to spread the gospel in other lands, they should move there and live there. Otherwise, they live in an artificial bubble of western culture and feel the need to protect their children from the local culture by sending them to boarding schools, which are always bad and often abusive..... All this to say we strongly encourage those of you who are seeking justice after being abused at boarding schools. We - scores of us survivors of Mamou - encourage and support you and most of us would be happy to help you in whatever way we can.
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