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			 Born in 1923 in west-central Illinois, Roland grew up near 
			Pittsfield and graduated from high school in that area. He now lives in 
			Lincoln at the Christian Village Congregate Apartments. The distance 
			between Pittsfield and Lincoln is about 100 miles. But, Roland's path was definitely not a straight line.
 			Roland took the long way, a very long way. He traveled to a place 
			about as far from central Illinois as one can get, not only 
			geographically, but culturally. He would live much of his life ina country he would love, India.
 
 			How did that happen?
 			Backing up to the beginning, William's father, Charles, was a farmer 
			and Christian minister. After William graduated from high school, 
			his father suggested that the younger Roland might want to consider 
			following in his footsteps and become aminister.
 
 			This was a decision, a profound decision, that would set the course 
			for William Roland's excellent adventure, an adventure far beyond 
			what a young man from central Illinois farmingcountry could imagine.
 			
			
			 
 			William first traveled to Cincinnati to attend the Cincinnati Bible 
			Seminary. While there he met a young woman, Jean Rothermel, also a 
			student. Friendship grew into a deep commitment that led to 
			marriage.
 			Jean's parents had been missionaries in India. In fact, Jean was 
			born in India, and she always wanted to return. She convinced 
			William to travel there with her. William's father thought it wasa good idea.
 
 			The couple left the United States in 1947, bound for northern India, 
			the mountainous region. The trip from San Francisco to Bombay, now 
			known as Mumbai, was a one-month trip on an old military troop ship. 
			This was no Crystal Cruise.
 			The ship was divided into two compartments, one for about a dozen 
			women and a separate compartment for the men -- definitely spartan 
			living conditions. They wound their way to Hawaii and the 
			Philippines, around Southeast Asia and to the
			east coast of India. Their trip was not over yet. It took another 
			week to travel around the south end of India and up the west coast 
			to Bombay.
 			The Rolands' next destination was the Landaur Language School. 
			There, they studied Hindustani, meaning place of the Hindus, a 
			language of northern India. Hindustani is a complexlanguage with 15 dialects. And they did this with their young 
			daughter, who had been born in the States.
 
 			While living in India, the Rolands spent the summers in the 
			mountains at 7,000 feet to avoid the sweltering 
			temperatures of the plains to the south. In winter, they traveled to 
			the plains, where temperatures were moderate, to
			work in a mission that had been established in the 19th century, the 
			mission where Jean's parents had taught early in the 20th century.
 			Bill and Jean returned to the United States in 1951. In their four 
			years in India they had two more children, both sons, and had 
			witnessed the birth of two new countries.
 			India had been a British colony until 1947, when a quiet revolution 
			led by Mahatma Gandhi led to the independent nation of India. A not-so-quiet revolution ensued between the Hindu majority and the Muslim 
			minority. This turbulence led to the formation of Pakistan -- West and 
			East Pakistan at the time -- a place to which India's Muslim minority 
			could emigrate. William and Jean were there for history in the 
			making. 			
			 
 			The Rolands returned to America in 1951 to help William's father 
			with his farming operation near Barry, Ill.
 			It was at this time that he attended Lincoln Bible Institute when 
			the school had just moved its campus to the east side of Lincoln. As 
			he recalls, "there was only one building at the time." Bill took 
			graduate classes and taught classes on missionwork.
 
 			LBI eventually became Lincoln Christian College and then Lincoln 
			Christian University.
 			Through this time back in the States, the strong lure of India was 
			still there.
 			William and Jean returned to India in 1954. "It felt like going 
			home," he says.
 			This time, while still traveling by ship, they left from New York 
			City and traveled east, through the Mediterranean Sea and the Suez 
			Canal. This route took one week off the trip. 			"I never felt 
			comfortable on a ship so this time was better. I was only seasick 
			for three weeks rather than four like the first trip in '47," he 
			related with a smile.
 			This return to the subcontinent found them at a Bible college, 
			training Indians to be missionaries, and then at the Woodstock 
			School in the Himalayas. Woodstock was a sort of early versionof a magnet school where missionaries in northern India sent their 
			children. It was a nondenominational institution.
 The Rolands were supported in part by Lincoln's First 
			Christian Church for their time in India from 1954 until 1964. "The Himalayas were a beautiful place to live. We really enjoyed our 
			time there," he said.
 			The Rolands returned to the U.S. in 1964. While William did teach 
			in India, he did not have a teaching certificate from a university. 
			When they returned, William and Jean ended up at Fort Hays State 
			in Kansas, where both of them received teaching certificates. 
			William majored in industrial arts. He also earned his pilot's 
			license there. Jean added a nursing degree. 
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            Do you notice a trend here? Neither William nor Jean was ever shy 
			about embarking on an adventure, and neither was hesitant about 
			remaking themselves. They were always passionate about furthering 
			their education.
 			What to do with their newly minted degrees? Opportunity was just a 
			few miles away in the Otis-Bison School District in Kansas. Roland 
			started teaching industrial arts and English, and eventually moved 
			into the position of principal at the juniorhigh.
 
 			Jean was employed locally as a nurse. They continued serving the 
			community until 1972, when the Hindus gave permission and they 
			returned to their first love, India.
 			Roland said that only about 3 percent of Indians were Christian in 
			his time there.
 			Their next journey to India, in 1974, was not to the familiar north of 
			the country, but to Madras on the southeast coast. A friend of the 
			couple had started a leprosy treatment facility in Madras and 
			invited William and Jean to join the staff. They leapt at theopportunity.
 
 			In Madras, Jean served as a nurse, and William used his industrial 
			arts skills to help the patients achieve mobility with their disease-damaged hands. Not only had he learned industrial arts, but he was 
			thinking outside the box in using his skill as a unique form of 
			physical therapy.
 			Madras was a difficult locale for them because they did not speak 
the local dialect, and they were too busy with their duties to take lessons. 
Roland said: "We were fortunate that the staff at the 
			clinic and doctors all spoke English, so we were able toget along."
 
 			The Madras culture was different also. "In northern India, wheat 
			made up a large part of the diet, but in southern India, rice was the 
			primary grain," said Roland. He commented, "I had not had rice until 
I went to India." 			
			
			 
 			Still, they found the work with the leprosy patients very rewarding.
 			William and Jean continued their exploration of India, moving to the 
			area near Bhopal to work at a Bible college and continuing that work 
			from 1978 until 1986.
 			They then returned to Madras and continued their affiliation with 
			the Madras Bible College in 1986. The college still exists.
 			Their mission continued until 1998, when they returned to the U.S. for 
			the last time, moving to their home in the Otis and Bison area of 
			Kansas. 			Do the math: William and Jean were in India from 1947 until 
			1998 except for the 10 years learning and teaching in Kansas and 
			one year farming with William's father.
 			Dates and place names are a part of a person's arc of life, but what 
			happened in those places, the people one meets, make the experience 
			more fascinating.
 			Because they spoke Hindustani while living in northern India, 
			William and Jean were able to know the Indian people well, were able 
to have a cultural understanding. William commented: "I spoke the 
			language so well that Indians oftenassumed I was a native. I was fluent enough to be able to discuss 
health issues with Indian doctors."
 
 			When they were not working, the Rolands rode the trains, a legacy 
			of British occupation, to all parts of the country and immersed 
			themselves in the Indian culture. They visited the Taj Mahal. They 
ate the local food and were able to order as if they were natives. With 
			a twinkle in his eye William said, "Jean could eat the hottest curry 
with no problem. I was not able to keep up with her."
 			While in India during the mid-1950s, a friend of the Rolands 
			leased a hunting preserve. They accompanied him there to hunt game: 
			deer, wild pigs, peacocks. This was not a lark, but a real life 
			necessity. There was little meat in India to buy,especially in the Hindu areas, so they had to hunt for food, prepare 
			it and preserve it.
 
 			This necessitated learning new skills. Jean learned how to cure meat 
			with spices and to can it. During one hunting expedition, a tiger 
			jumped out of the forest and stopped very close to their vehicle. 
			William was able to shoot the animal, and the result of that 
			encounter is hanging on the wall at the Christian Village Congregate 
			Center in Lincoln where Roland now resides. 			
			
			 
 			And such is the story of William Roland, who traveled the 100 
			miles from Pittsfield, Ill., to Lincoln, Ill., with a 40-year detour through India. Along the way he was a student, husband, 
			father to a daughter and three sons, farmer,
			missionary, language student, again a student in Kansas, pilot, 
			industrial arts and English teacher in Kansas, a junior high 
			principal, and a physical therapist. 			Roland's life is rich with 
			adventures he shared with Jean, adventures well beyond the borders 
			of his home country. It is a life notable for his unstinting 
			commitment and service to the people he met along the way. 
			[By CURT FOX] |