Owen Pomana
Former bodybuilder and underworld
criminal now helps prisoners start a new life
As a ships diver in the Royal New Zealand Navy, Owen Pomana lived on high
adventure, keeping an extreme level of fitness and nights out with alcohol and
women whenever he was at port.
After seven years of service, he became a successful personal trainer and body
builder, until an ugly betrayal left him heartbroken.
“I placed highly in all my body building competitions,” Owen
remembers proudly. “I represented New Zealand and the South Pacific at
National, and World Body Building Competitions, placing fifth at the World
INBA Champs in Las Vegas, USA in 1997.”
After Las Vegas, Owen was on a high, and then arrived home to discover that
his girlfriend was cheating with his best friend. Sinking into uncontrollable
bitterness and alcoholism, he decided to move to Sydney to start a new
life.
His savings quickly dried up, forcing him to sleep in a park for six weeks
until a sleazy bar offered him security work.
He then found work as a personal trainer and earned some big money as a
bouncer and debt collector in the nightclub industry.
“My life was beginning to spiral out of control,” Owen remembers.
“I was arrested for an armed kidnapping and carjacking of a wealthy
businessman’s son.”
A new friend in the maximum security prison put up his bail. He then lived
with the national president of an outlawed motorcycle gang collecting drug
debts.
He tried to restart his life in Queensland as a personal trainer, but became
caught up in the same circles and made the mistake of borrowing money to help
a friend who did not repay.
To repay his debt, Owen robbed the biggest drug dealers in the state, which
almost succeeded until he unknowingly walked in on a federal police sting.
After posting bail, he attempted to take on an outlaw motorcycle gang that had
given him a bad job, but received a 15-minute bashing by five men with steel
hammers.
Hospitalised with severe blood loss and numerous broken bones, Owen began
planning his revenge when he realised that someone had stolen his taiaha, a
Maori traditional weapon that had his father’s name carved on it.
This was the motivation for Owen to plot an explosive revenge attack and to
possibly take his own life doing it. He uncovered a plot from a hit man that
was sent to shoot him, and they became friends. He helped Owen to recover his
taiaha and cancelled the hit.
“I was facing either death from underworld figures or a lengthy jail
sentence, and I was smashed on seven grams of meth-amphetamine a day, which
kept me awake for up to seven days straight,” Owen explains.
“That night I went down to the beach in front of my apartment, and I
cried out, ‘If there is a God, you need to help me. You know my life. If
you help me, I promise to give up the guns, the drugs and the
violence’.”
As he sat down, he felt a small Gideon’s Bible in his back pocket
— a gift from a friend who had become a Christian a year earlier.
“I asked God to speak to me and I opened the Bible to
Psalm 23Psalm 23. Using
the light of my cell phone I read: ‘Though I walk through the valley of
the shadow of death, I’ll fear no evil, for you (God) are with me, your
rod and staff they comfort me.’ I had just tripped over a big stick like
a shepherd’s staff, and I had my taiaha in my hand.”
Three weeks later, a meth-using friend visited and happened to bring a friend
who was a Christian pastor.
“Do you think Jesus can help me with jail and my drug addictions?”
Owen asked Pastor Ken.
“Yes,” Ken replied. “Jesus says just ask Him into your
heart. You need to turn from all the evil things you have done, repent and ask
for His forgiveness because you need to be born again. Do you want to make
that decision to be free, Owen?”
Owen recalls: “When I said, yes, before he could touch my shoulder God
was at work in my life. I felt clean, like I didn’t need drugs or the 45
calibre pistol that was in my pocket.”
That day, Ken explained to Owen from John chapter 3, verse 3 and 16, that
“No one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again” and
“God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son [Jesus], that
whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.”
A week later, Owen moved into Pastor Ken’s garage and began helping him
care for needy people on the streets.
Six months later, Owen pleaded guilty to all charges and the judge unusually
allowed Pastor Ken to share an inspiring testimony about Owen’s changed
character. Further encouraged by a psychologist’s good report, the judge
handed down a five year sentence, suspended after 18 months, far less than the
six to eight years the lawyers expected.
Before his 18 months finished and he was deported back to New Zealand, Owen
says God used him to lead many prisoners into a personal relationship with
Jesus Christ.
Owen Pomana visited prisoners at Ba Correctional Centre, Fiji, in May 2011 to share how his life changed
Unlikely to get a passport, many people thought his life was over, but Owen
says God opened up many opportunities to talk about Him.
“I have toured New Zealand prisons with former All Black rugby stars
Michael Jones and Eroni Clarke, who are also Christians,” he
says.
He has also obtained a passport and travelled to Fiji and Pakistan, where he
talked about Jesus to crowds of people.
“I have seen people delivered from every type of bondage,” he
shares.
“The key to deliverance is renouncing all your sins, expressing genuine
sorrow for your sins and asking Jesus to forgive you and turning from those
sins and to renew your mind to what God says.”
Owen confesses he is not at all perfect. “I have fallen short numerous
times, but I have brought it all to the light so that God can heal me from
every setback and old habits,” he says.
“God has given me a new start to walk in love and truth.”
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