[The Women of the Arabs by Henry Harris Jessup]@TWC D-Link book
The Women of the Arabs

CHAPTER VIII
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Several of the younger pupils were much interested in the subject of religion at the time, and one little girl about seven years old said to her teacher, "I gave the Lord my heart, and He took it." Asin died in Latakiah in 1869, triumphing in Christ.

The women of the neighborhood came to the house of her brother to hear her joyous expressions of trust in Jesus, and her assurance that she should soon be with Him in glory.

She was the second daughter of that young bride of fifteen years of age, who learned to read in 1825, in the school taught by her own husband, Tannus el Haddad.
In 1867, the health of Rufka having become seriously impaired, she removed to Egypt, where after a period of rest, she opened on her own account a school for girls in Cairo, which she maintained with her wonted energy, until her marriage with the Rev.Mr.Muir, a Scotch clergyman, whom she accompanied to Melbourne, Australia, in 1869.

Since the death of her husband she has returned to her favorite employment of teaching, with marked success, among the British population of Melbourne.
While in Cairo, she passed through a deep and agonizing religious experience, which she described in the following letter to Mrs.Whiting, and the result of which was a new life in Christ.
Cairo, Egypt, _July 9, 1868_.
"I think I shall always remember my stay in Cairo with much pleasure, but the greatest advantage of this year is the opportunity I had of stopping to think of the interests of a never dying soul, of a neglected Saviour, an offended God.

Yes, I have reflected, struggled, oh, how hard, and thanks to an ever merciful God, I trust I have been led by the Holy Spirit to see and feel my great sin, and casting myself at the feet of Jesus, stayed there with my sinful heart till a loving Saviour just came and took it up.


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