Miracle on Flight IC814
By Rohit Kumar
Christmas is one time of the year when God manages to get more of
the world’s attention as our thoughts turn to the “miracle of the
manger,” Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem. There’s just something about
reflecting on that act of divine intervention that kindles hope in our
hearts. No matter what problems we have struggled through all year,
Christmas still brings with it a special hope that things will work out.
On Christmas morning 2000, that hope flickered low at our Family
International community in New Delhi, India. We awoke to news that an
Indian Airlines plane had been hijacked and diverted to a desolate
airbase in the remote mountain city of Kandahar, Afghanistan. Our
hearts sank further as we realized that one of our dear friends was
aboard that plane.
It’s hard to describe what happened next, but the thought of someone I
knew personally, someone with a wife and two children, was now in
danger of losing his life along with 120 other passengers, took me
over. Almost without thinking, I got down on my knees and began
praying. I had never prayed like that before. It was almost as though
my entire being turned into a prayer as I asked the Almighty to
intervene.
There’s a saying in show business that also goes for our volunteer
work, where others are always counting on us: “The show must go on.” So
we did our scheduled benefit Christmas musical shows that day—one at an
orphanage, one at a prison, and one at a foster home for children from
disturbed backgrounds. Our hearts were heavy as we empathized with
those aboard IC814, but the happiness and laughter of those watching
our shows gave us temporary reprieve.
Between shows, we prayed together and individually for the safety of
the hostages. When we returned home, the mood was somber. The hijacking
was headline news in every paper and on every network. It was all
people talked about.
The next day brought more bad news. The hijackers had executed the
first passenger—a young man returning from his honeymoon in the
Himalayas. I went into my room and cried. Then I prayed for God to
comfort the man’s widow and family.
That evening the hijackers threatened to kill one passenger every hour
until their demands were met. The situation continued to look bleak.
That night I desperately needed supernatural assurance that God was in
control of the situation. We all did. As I lay tossing and turning in
bed, unable to sleep, a verse from the Bible came to mind. “Ask, and it
will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be
opened to you” (Matthew 7:7).
I decided to do something that I had done many times before—ask Jesus
for a direct message to help me see things as He did. I found a pen and
opened the notebook where I keep a record of all the things I believe
Jesus has said to me about many personal situations, and I prayed,
“Jesus, I really need to hear from You. I need Your words of
encouragement and counsel.”
Then I quieted my spirit and tried to put my preconceptions and all
other thoughts out of my mind—and I waited. Slowly, His words started
forming in my mind and I wrote them down.
“I will stay the hand of the hijackers, and no more shall perish. I
have set strong angels about the plane, and they shall protect the
passengers. Keep praying, for your prayers shall form a force field
around them. You shall see your friend emerge from the plane.”
It was a brief message, but a tremendously comforting one to me. All I
needed to do was believe what the Lord had said, no matter what the
circumstances.
I held on to Jesus’ promise for the next five days, and in the end the
hijack drama played out exactly as Jesus had told me. None of the other
hostages were harmed, and on the night of December 31st they were all
released. As we huddled in front of the TV, watching a live telecast of
the hostages being brought home, our friend was the first person to
emerge from the plane.
Later we discovered what the Lord had meant when He said, “I will stay
the hand of the hijackers.” Our friend told us that a few times during
the crisis the hijackers had started preparing to execute the hostages
one by one, but each time something seemed to stop them. I believe with
all of my heart that the hijackers had been held back by the Lord and
His angels, in answer to the prayers of many here in India and around
the world.
Rohit Kumar is a full-time volunteer with the Family International in India.