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How the Gospel Reached the Brutal 'Skull Splitters' Tribe in the Amazon

Yanomami village
Yanomami village | Renew Outreach

The warriors from the Skull Splitter tribe walked 10 days on foot from a village deep in the Amazon jungle because they wanted to find someone who would tell them about the Son of God.

"They sent out five guys," says Larry Buckman, a veteran missionary with Renew Outreach. "The old men in the tribe said they were too old to go, so they sent the young guys out.

"Why did they decide to trek 10 days straight north to find somebody? They had no way of knowing there was anybody even up there. Of course the Holy Spirit was leading them."

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The Yanomami group that walked out of the jungle were among the worst Skull Splitters in the entire Amazon, from the Hakoma area, according to Larry. While there were a few Yanomami believers, the Hakoma area was unreached. Fifty-five years earlier, two missionaries named Bob and Steve had attempted to take the gospel to them.

When Bob and Steve first went to the Hakoma area in the Sixties they reported that almost everyone was drugged, they had unsightly green mucous coming out of their noses, and they were vomiting all the time. "At night they would get possessed by demons, they would beat up on their wives and split their heads open with their clubs.

"The tradition was if a girl was going to get married to another man, the oldest man in the tribe had her first. If she let the young man have her first, they beat up on her," Bob reported to Larry.

"They almost killed us then," Bob said.

The five warriors arrived at the Palimi-ú River in September, 2012 after their 10-day journey.

They happened to enter a village where two Brazilian Christians, Paul and Bethany had been living for 14 years, learning the language and translating the New Testament.

Remarkably, the five arrived at the height of a celebration by the local church that involved food, dances, the Lord's Supper and baptisms.

The believers immediately recognized them as the dreaded Skull Splitters, enemies of the village. The warriors were dressed in loincloths, armed with bows and arrows, blowguns and deadly poison darts. The celebratory mood suddenly shifted.

Are they going to kill us? they wondered. Surprisingly, the five got into the baptism line with 32 other new believers.

"I did not ask if they wanted Jesus; I baptized the five along with the others," Paul recounted.

He and Bethany invited the warriors into their house and spent the next five hours talking to them.

The men explained the reason they had traveled such a distance. "We are tired of living the way we have always lived," they told Paul and Bethany. "We have been killing people and drugging ourselves. We want to live a different life. Somebody told us about the Son of God. Do you know who that is?"

Paul told them about the Creator God—the Father, Jesus the Savior, and the Holy Spirit, the friend, comforter and guide. "We saw their eyes sparkle with wonder about everything we said," Paul recounted.

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