John Chau's father blames 'extreme Christianity' for his North Sentinel Island death

The father of John Chau, the US missionary killed when he attempted to land on North Sentinel Island to convert the inhabitants there, has hit out at the 'extreme Christianity' he blames for his son's death.

John Allen Chau was killed on North Sentinel Island.

Interviewed by The Guardian, Dr Patrick Chau – like his son, a graduate of the evangelical Oral Roberts University in Oklahoma – said they had long been at odds over his missionary work and had agreed not to talk about it.

In his email comments he called religion 'the opium of the mass[es]', quoting Karl Marx, and said: 'If you have [anything] positive to say about religion l wish not to see or hear' it.

He said: 'John is gone because the Western ideology overpowered my [Confucian] influence. He said evangelicals' 'extreme Christianity' had driven his son to a 'not unexpected end'.

North Sentinel Island, part of the isolated Andaman group and administered by India, is home to a tribe which for decades has had little if any contact with outsiders. India has placed it out of bounds to visitors, fearing the introduction of disease. Chau had himself taken there by local fishermen and paddled ashore in a kayak. However, after twice attempting to approach the tribespeople he was killed on his third attempt.

All Nations, the organisation behind Chau's mission, told Christian Today it did not accept that North Sentinel Island ought to be isolated, that the landing was not illegal and that Chau had been well prepared for his venture.

News
The groundbreaking BBC series that brought Jesus to TV screens
The groundbreaking BBC series that brought Jesus to TV screens

Seventy years ago, in February 1956, the BBC aired the mini-series “Jesus of Nazareth”, which was the first filming of the life of Jesus to be created for television. This is the story …

Christians mobilised to oppose extreme abortion law changes
Christians mobilised to oppose extreme abortion law changes

Christians are being asked to urge peers to support amendments tabled by Baronesses Monckton and Stroud.

Thousands of Christians return to churches in north-east Nigeria despite years of terror
Thousands of Christians return to churches in north-east Nigeria despite years of terror

The faithful are returning “in their thousands, not hundreds” despite more than a decade of brutal violence.

Trump is '100 per cent' more spiritual after assassination attempt, says pastor friend
Trump is '100 per cent' more spiritual after assassination attempt, says pastor friend

Trump's pastor and friend Mark Burns said the US President knows "the hand of God' was on him when he survived the 2024 assassination attempt.