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Cyril H. Brooks

Cyril H. Brooks (December 11, 1898 – March 1986) was an English preacher and missionary whose ministry spanned over fifty years, primarily serving in the Philippines with the Plymouth Brethren. Born in Lingfield, Surrey, England, to Harry Brooks and Ellen Sheldon Brooks, he grew up in a modest family involved in the leather trade. Converted in his youth, he committed to missionary work and married Anna Rose Carson on September 20, 1922, in Buffalo, New York, where she was raised after emigrating from Belfast, Northern Ireland. Brooks’ preaching career began in the Philippines, where he arrived as an Open Brethren pioneer assembly planter. He focused on gospel broadcasting and church planting, notably during World War II, when he was interned by the Japanese at Santo Tomas and later Los Baños camps from 1942 to 1945, continuing to preach under challenging conditions until his liberation in February 1945. After the war, he resumed his missionary efforts, emphasizing grace and perseverance, as detailed in his autobiography Grace Triumphant.