Watch Paulette tell her remarkable and inspiring story
Back home that night, Paulette finally allows herself to cry. ‘She’s even further away,’ she tells her husband. Once again, they lift their hands and pray.
‘We were trying to convert each other’
When Paulette was studying for the equivalent of A-levels in Senegal, she spent a holiday helping to care for her aunt’s new baby. That was when she met Joseph. A keen pianist, he and a group of other young people met at her aunt’s house for band practice. They became friends, and started to see each other more often.
Joseph was a Christian, though. Paulette’s family were all Muslims. When their relationship became more serious, her family said there was no problem at all – as long as he converted.
So one day Paulette told Joseph, ‘I am going to convert you to Islam.’
He replied, ‘And I want to do everything I can so that you will become a Christian.’
‘For him it was because of his faith, but for me it was the condition imposed by my family,’ she explains.
Paulette had lots of questions about Christianity, so Joseph gave her leaflets and short books of the Bible in French, a language she had learnt at school. ‘He never forced me to become a Christian,’ she says. ‘But he encouraged me to look into it. And when I had difficulties, he encouraged me to pray. Whenever I prayed, I saw the answers.’
‘My family tried to make me change my mind’
Paulette’s family took their faith very seriously. Each morning her uncle would stand in front of the house and everyone came to greet him. ‘He could see who had got up for prayer and who hadn’t.’
‘Translation is a gift that is in you’
Soon afterwards, Joseph became a pastor. In 2001, he and Paulette started to lead a church. Since pastors in Senegal generally study theology in French, they are usually more comfortable preaching in French too. As Joseph preached, Paulette translated into Wolof, the language spoken by the majority of people in Senegal.
‘I didn’t see my mother for two years’
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