

A Brief Introduction to Origin of S.I.B. in Sarawak,
Malaysia
The Borneo Evangelical Mission (BEM) was
pioneered by Hudson Southwell together with two fellow missionaries Frank
Davidson and Carey Tolley of Australia. They boarded an old cargo steamer from
Melbourne in early October 1928 bound for Singapore. Travelling with them was
Alexander Henderson, a pioneer of the Southeast Asian timber trade who had
offered to help establish a base on the island of Borneo. Henderson left the
team the following year.
On 12th November 1928, Southwell and Henderson
landed in Kuching, Borneo. They were referred to the Rajah's private secretary,
Gerard MacBryan and the Rajah's cousin and legal adviser Charles Willes Johnson.
The Rajah gave permission to establish a mission in Sarawak and recommended
starting in the Limbang area to the north-east. Davidson and Tolley were to join
them later.
The historical setting then was the regime of the
White Rajahs in Sarawak that began with the English adventurer and explorer
James Brooke who set out for Borneo in 1839. His nephew Charles Johnson Brooke
succeeded him in 1868. The third Rajah was Charles Vyner Brooke who ruled from
1917. The era of the White Rajahs came to an end on 1st July 1946 when Sarawak
became a crown colony.
Sarawak, together with Sabah and the Federation
of Malayan States came together and formed Malaysia in 1963. With the increasing
use of the Malaysian national language, Borneo Evangelical Church soon became
Sidang Injil Borneo or more commonly known as S.I.B. Today, S.I.B. churches may
be found in Sabah and Peninsula Malaysia besides Sarawak.
Recommended reading "Uncharted Waters" by C
Hudson Southwell, Astana Publishing Ltd.