A British Catholic aid worker who was kidnapped for three months in Sudan says his faith kept him going and that he refused to convert to Islam, he told The Catholic Herald.
Patrick Noonan, a 48-year-old former soldier from Bradford, in northern England, was kidnapped by anti-government rebels in South Darfur in March and kept in chains and fed only oranges and camel milk during part of his three-month captivity.
Mr Noonan said: “I was isolated in a corner in approximately two metre by one and a half metres, in chains, stripped naked. I’m a devout Catholic, I used to pray in the mornings and the evening even before I was kidnapped, and then four times a day when I was kidnapped.
“I just thought about my family, my faith. It was definitely my faith that got me through, and being raised in a council estate in Bradford, as well as the military background.”
During his ordeal, he said, one of his Muslim captors would pray beside him. “One guy spoke perfect English and he was a devout Muslim and he would stand either side of the partition, and he tried to convert me to Islam, offered me two wives, and to fight for the rebels.
"He tried twice, and I told him I believed in Jesus Christ and I could have only have only one wife, and I could not fight because I work for the United Nations and am a neutral.”
Mr Noonan spent 23 years as a soldier with the Prince of Wales Regiment, and afterwards worked for the UN in Iraq from 2005.
At one point, after two months on oranges and water from a well, he was seriously unwell, and survived because of “a significant experience… which convinced me that we have a guardian angel”.
FULL STORY English kidnap victim says his faith kept him going (Catholic Herald)