1.07.26. Book 7: 26. The Dohnavur Fellowship
HE DOHNAVUR FELLOWSHIP THE work known by this name began in 1901. There exists in connection with the temples of India a system like that which obtained in such places as the great temple of Corinth with its Thousand Servants. Young children trained for temple service have no chance to grow up good. They are the most defenceless of God’s innocent little creatures. We gave ourselves to save them, and as we lived in a village called Dohnavur the work became known by that name. In 1918 we began to take boys too, for they also are used in the temples, and still more often in the evil dramatic societies of Southern India. The story of the Fellowship is told in Gold Cord. From the first we thought of the children as our own. We did not make a Home for them; when they came to us they were at home. And so from the beginning we were a family, never an institution; and we all, Indian and European men and women, live and work together on the lines of an Indian family, each contributing what each has to offer for the help of all. We have no salaried workers, Indian or foreign; make no appeal for funds; and authorize none to be made for us. We have never lacked; as the needs grew supplies came; and as we advance we find that our Unseen Leader is moving on before us. There are between six and seven hundred in the family, several outposts in the villages and medical work.
