000 nam a22 7a 4500
999 _c32146
_d32146
008 181025b2017 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9789386582386
082 _a823.92 PAU-J
100 _aPaul, Janice Campbell
245 _aThe secret wife :
_bmemoirs of an American missionary in India and Nepal /
_cJanice Campbell Paul
260 _aIndia
_bSpeaking Tiger
_c2017
300 _a352 p.
365 _aINR
_b599.00
500 _aJanice Campbell Paul was just an ordinary American woman, not particularly religious or spiritual, when she was stricken with fibromyalgia, an illness so inexplicable that even the doctors were left puzzled. Slowly, as the sickness took over, she lost the life she had known. As friends and family eased their way out of her life, she was left alone, completely dependent on a wheelchair as she struggled to adjust to her new world. It was then that she discovered love. First, the love of God, which, she believes, created a series of miraculous events that set her life on a different course completely, and enabled her to walk again. The other love, no less powerful, was for a young man, many years her junior, in faraway West Bengal. Their long-distance relationship gave her the courage to dream again. It also gave her the courage to follow her calling and, equipped with a Bible and a heart full of faith, she travelled to the remote village of Bhat Bandh in Bengal. Together, she and the young man built a church, worked with an orphanage and struggled in a culture that would never accept their love or secret marriage. The couple moved to Kathmandu, where Janice lived for many years, though the struggles and challenges they faced eventually destroyed their marriage and their faith in their purpose together. Now 64, Janice is still walking...a bit slower but still determined to go out and tell the world about her healing, about a God that lives in a most imperfect woman and to show others that there is hope in a very dark world.
650 _aFamily secrets
650 _aLessons in Leprosy