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Without a Trace
On a dark night ten years ago in a remote jungle town, Colombian rebels pointed rifles at three missionaries and told their wives to pack the men's bags.
by John W. Kennedy
 1 of 7

As millions of Americans watched the Dallas Cowboys pummel the Buffalo Bills in Super Bowl XXVII on the final night of January 1993, three American missionary families in the isolated Panama rain forest settled into their nightly routine.
Earlier on that Sunday, 28 members of the indigenous Kuna tribe had attended a believers' meeting facilitated by the New Tribes Missions (NTM) families in the village of Pucuro, population 300. The Americans had moved to the village in the Darien province of Panama to translate the Bible into Kuna as well as to teach the Indians how to read and write their own language. Dave Mankins, the missionary who had been in the community the longest, stretched out in a hammock, near his front door to listen to news on a short-wave radio. His wife, Nancy, read a book by flashlight in her hammock.
Suddenly three men wearing camouflage uniforms and toting machine guns burst through the front screen door. When Dave stood up they hit him with the butt of their rifles and pointed the automatic weapons at his head.
Nancy, instantly recalling a one-hour NTM training course on what to do in a terrorism situation, remained calm and deciphered what the intruders wanted as they rapidly yelled in Spanish. They tied Dave's hands behind his back and then ransacked the house, seizing the short-wave radio, laptop computer, tape recorder, and money.
Nancy initially thought the men only wanted to steal possessions, but then one ordered her to pack a suitcase that contained three sets of clothes for her husband. She included a Bible in the bag.
One invader went outside and fired a shot into the air. Two shots rang out in the distance, signalingNancy knewthat similar invasions had taken place at the home of the other two missionary families in the village.
At his residence, Rick Tenenoff had been sitting in a hammock while his wife, Patti, finished putting their two youngest children to bed. Patti heard a scuffle in the living room. As she looked down the hallway she saw Spanish-speaking intruders tying her husband's hands. When ordered to pack a suitcase for Rick, Patti had the presence of mind to include a family photo. Likewise, thieves burst into the home of Mark and Tania Rich, who had just finished rocking their two little girls to sleep.
These interlopers took the menDave Mankins, then 43; Rick Tenenoff, 36; and Mark Rich, only 23into the jungle. The last image the wives had of their husbands was the men being marched away, hands bound behind their backs. The women gathered at the Tenenoff house, trying to make sense of the few moments of terror and confusion. The swirling events seemed surreal, as the men who took their husbands didn't reveal their identity or objectives.
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