Meet Galen and Maritta Fiedler

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Galen Fiedler and his son, Jared, in front of the school where Galen teaches.

Before visiting Sierra Leone in December, I traveled to Germany to meet with Galen and Maritta Fielder. In April, they were approved as Global Ministries missionaries.

Galen is the son of Phil and Carol Fiedler, former UB missionaries in Sierra Leone, so he is a missionary kid. So is Maritta. She is a German citizen whose parents were missionaries in South Africa, Namibia, and Papua New Guinea.

Maritta_260.jpgGalen and Maritta (right) met in Israel at a kibbutz. They corresponded for about five years. Then she made her first visit to the United States. That first night, Galen proposed, and she said yes.

Now they’re married with two children, and very actively ministering to neighbors and families in their community in southwestern Germany. Galen teaches at a Christian school called Aloys Henhofer Schulem. There are very few evangelicals in that part of Germany; most evangelicals live in the north around Berlin and Hanover. People in their area would be traditionally Catholic, mostly post-Christian.

The school primarily educates Christian children, but wants to make a broader impact in the community. So Galen, because of his English-speaking ability, developed an English club for kids from the school and community.

Galen began thinking about raising partners back in the US. It’s not about finances. That’s not an issue, because the Fiedlers earn their own living. Rather, they wondered if some English-speaking people could partner with them and maybe help them reach into the community.

So we began an email dialogue. We’re working to develop a relationship between Global Ministries and the school which might include such things as:

  • Short-term teams doing summer English camps.
  • Practicums for Huntington University students in the new English Teaching major.
  • Exchange students.

The first exchange student will come this summer and stay with Cathy and J. R. Reich (Cathy is Bishop Ramsey’s administrative assistant). This 13-year-old girl is the daughter of the school’s director.

The Fiedlers are been approved as “non-traditional” missionaries. That’s a new category. They are UB missionaries, but non-traditional since most of their support comes from his employment. They will require only a very small budget to facilitate involvement with short-term teams and other ministries. So they’re not going out in the traditional sense as fulltime missionaries, but their ministry is definitely fulltime.

This category may be used a lot more in the future by people who can support themselves through alternative means–business, retirement, other opportunities.

The Fiedlers live with Maritta’s parents, Opa and Oma. They took very good care of me, and fed me very well. Opa is suffering from cancer right now, and was quite weak while I was there. But he told me great stories. He learned to speak English from Australians while living in Papua New Guinea. It was interesting hearing this German speak English with an Australian accent.

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