Sunday, February 7, 2016

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - re- A Take on Pan-Africanism and Freedom From Religious and Cultural Colonisation

 

Dear Cornelius Magnus,

Greetings! Thanks for your commentary on Christianity, Islam and Christianity. When you say Africa's population is 53% Muslim and only 38% Christian, with the rest 'animist', I am compelled to ask, which Africa are we talking about? There is the fictitious, 'pan-African' Africa that includes the Mafghrib and Egypt. You and I know that this is not the 'real Africa'. I used to live in Carthage, Tunis. These people don't really regard themselves as Africans at all. They only do so when it is convenient and advantageous for that moment. They see themselves first and foremost as Arabs.  How many Arab Africans, for example, are in this "African Dialogue Forum"?

So, when we lump everyone as being 'African', we aren't saying very much. In Egypt, of course, some 10 percent of the people are Christian; a people under savage persecution centuries – it's a miracle they have survived. I once invited to Tunis my 'father' and mentor, Rev. Dr. Johann Boer, a Dutch-Canadian missionary who served in Nigeria for 3 decades. I took them to the ruins of the ancient churches and monasteries of Carthage. He was moved to tears. People do not easily remember their history. The whole of North Africa was predominantly Christian. St. Augustine of Hippo lived in a village across the Algerian border. He came to study in the seminary in Carthage. Together with St. Ambrose and other Africans, they literally laid the foundation of the Latin Church. The old cathedral in Carthage, which has been turned into arts theatre by the Tunisian government, has produced no less than 3 black Popes.

No, we should never speak as if Christianity is alien to Africa. In fact, it is more indigenous to Africa than it is to the West. The Desert Fathers of Egypt were the first to institute the practice of monasticism. There are also the monopysite Ethiopian Copts, with their rich tradition of spirituality centred in the mysterious rock-hewn churches of Lalibela and the ancient Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion in Axum, where it is believed the most sacred object in Jewish spirituality, the Ark of the Covenant, is kept.

Edward Wilmot Blyden was a remarkable man – regarded by most of us as "the father of pan-Africanism". He wrote about religion in the new Africa with great wisdom and sensitivity. But I have no evidence that he expressed a 'preference' for Islam over Christianity. He was a preacher and evangelist with a Doctor of Divinity degree. What he really said, to my understanding, is that we in Africa must evolve a modus vivendi between Mazrui's "trinity" of Christianity, Islam and Traditional Religion. I believe that Ethiopia and Eritrea (minus the dictatorship) offer a model of peaceful c0o-existence between Christianity and Islam. In Senegal, Mali and Cote d'Ivoire, Muslims and Christians live largely peacefully. They see themselves as Africans and they have no illusions regarding the bersekeries that Arabs have committed against the African people – and still do in Mauritania and Sudan.

Christianity a 'minor Jewish sect'? This must be the understatement of the millennium.

The claim of Jesus Christ is a serious, overwhelming claim that has been confronted by the greatest geniuses of all time. No book comes close to the Bible in its sheer record of publication. Christianity is the fastest growing religion in the world. The Chinese are turning to Christianity in their millions. He claims to be Lord. Ironically, each time Christians are persecuted and killed in northern Nigeria, Sudan, and Egypt and elsewhere, more converts are won. People are beginning to ask, between the killers and those who preach love and peace, who are the genuine children of God?

The writer C. S. Lewis says that claim is totalitarian and does not give room for any equivocation. He must either be a lunatic, liar or Lord. What we think of Him makes all the difference to our spiritual destiny.

There is a new movement to bring together Jews and Christians in a new oecumene that will hasten the return of Yeshua ha Mashiach. It is a movement that reached its most dramatic moment when the most revered Rabbi in Israel, Rabbi. Avadiah Yosef, Chief Rabbi of the Sephardi in Yerushalaim, revealed that he had seen the Mashiach. He revealed Him to be Yeshua. World Jewry can never be the same again.

The Christians of Africa do not buy into the redneck fanaticism which sees Christianity as being in mortal, antinomian conflict with Islam. No. Muslims are also God's children. Anyone who hates Muslims or anyone else – including lesbians and homosexuals – does not know the Lord. Of course, we know that He hates sin and everything that grieves the Holy Spirit. But He loves the sinner and  He weeps for the lost. He came mainly for them and it is for them that the whole universe groans for the revelations of the children of God, to echo St. Paul.

Christianity, far from being a 'minor Jewish sect', is the most audacious spiritual message in the entire history of Humanity. It is not a religion – forget this Europe and their cupidity in turning the Light into an ideology of power, domination and racial bigotry. There is only one question: What did you do with Jesus Christ? Did you walk in His spirit or did you crucify Him once again? Christ is being re-crucified today by Fulani marauders in the Middle Belt of Nigeria, by Boko Haram, by ISIS and the lot. But then, very soon – sooner or later -- everyone will have to face Him to answer that question.

Obadiah Mailafia


On Sat, Feb 6, 2016 at 5:49 PM, Cornelius Hamelberg <corneliushamelberg@gmail.com> wrote:

The Africa of which she speaks  so powerfully is the second largest and second most populous continent in the world.

Today,  53% of Africa's population is Muslim whereas  Christianity in Africa can boast of 38% of the continent's population. Of course, Islam is winning the battle for converts – and this, despite its ban on the consumption of al-cohol and  perhaps because of some of  the reasons outlined in Edward Wilmot Blyden's Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race – in which he expresses a personal preference for Islam  basically his claim being that Islam is a little closer to the natural ( fitra) and naturally closer to African cultures and the so called African way of life, to begin with.

In context, this is from her (the speaker's) preamble, on her way to "there must be a cultural revolution" and the continent coming into "revolutionary consciousness":

"The other weapon that imperialism uses which is a challenge for Pan-African Renaissance is religion. Some of us, you know, with all our rhetoric – it's shocking, we are still deeply Christian, deeply Muslim, deeply this, deeply everything but African. …" (not clear… some laughter from the crowd) "And we can't understand as long as you continue to see and to understand God and the creator through the lenses of another race you will never know freedom in your life – never!  Religion is a cultural understanding of the spiritual…."etc  etc. etc.

It's not as if Christianity (a little Jewish sect) was ever imposed wholesale wherever it travelled from Jerusalem – to Rome, Turkey, Ethiopia, Egypt and the rest of North Africa (before the advent of al-Islam) and what's now known as the West, its wholesale conquest of Europe,  North and South America etc.….

 There is this something known as contextualisation .  Nowadays, the mass is celebrated in the Igbo Language because Christianity has adapted/ been adapted to its various localities in Africa South of the Sahara, although I do not know the extent to which it has been adapted in e.g. Nigeria to accommodate the exigencies of local traditional cultures (such as polygamy) that flourished before the advent of Christian mission – Christian missionary zeal attempting  real-time fulfilment of the great command

This little practical item that occurs in this Sabbath's Torah portion has been acted upon in Nigeria for example with tremendous zeal, but perhaps not as Torah induced zeal?

Shemot 22: 17 in my Torah: "You shall not permit a sorceress to live"

It's Exodus 22.18 in the Christian Bible

The stone Chumash not reads:   "17. A Sorceress. The court-inflicted death penalty applies equally to male and female sorcerers, but the verse uses the feminine because this activity was more common among women ( Rashi)…. By definition, sorcery is an attempt to assume control of nature through the powers of impurity and thus to deny God's mastery. "You shall not permit to live." This is a stronger expression than simply stating that she incurs the death penalty. Those who engage in sorcery are extremely dangerous to others, because of the corrosive and enticing nature of such an activity. Regarding such great dangers, the Torah exhorts the nation to root them out zealously. (Ramban) "

In Africa people identified as "witches" are being rooted out by the death penalty / summary executions without trial  ( as was the historic case of Christianity's  extermination of alleged witches  in Europe from the  Middle of the fifteenth century

On the whole, m

issionaries have tended to regard indigenous African religions as witchcraft…

What I don't know and have never investigated is whether or not the death penalty for people who are alleged to be witches  in Nigeria is a pre Christian and pre-Islamic cultural tradition – and arising from that , with or without a "cultural renaissance" or revolutionary consciousness " what is to be done ?  Is it high time that that these executions were brought to an end?

Only asking this one of a dozen questions,

Cornelius

We Sweden

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