This article from NYTimes.com 
has been sent to you by [EMAIL PROTECTED]

A slightly different perspective on Christian Missionaries--one that I have a first 
experience of.

cm

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

/-------------------- advertisement -----------------------\

Explore more of Starbucks at Starbucks.com.
http://www.starbucks.com/default.asp?ci=1015
\----------------------------------------------------------/

God on Their Side

September 27, 2003
 By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF 



 

MAPUTO, Mozambique 

Mention the words "evangelical missionary," and many
Americans conjure up an image of redneck zealots' forcing
starving children to be baptized before they get a few
crusts of bread. 

In reality, the wave of activity abroad by U.S.
evangelicals is one of the most important - and welcome -
trends in our foreign relations. I disagree strongly with
most evangelical Christians, theologically and politically.
But I tip my hat to them abroad. 

In a house beside the filthy garbage dump here in
Mozambique's capital, a 17-year-old named Sonia Angeline
was giving birth in early June. She had no doctor and no
midwife, and after four days in labor, she was a
hairsbreadth from becoming one more Mozambican woman to die
in childbirth. 

"We didn't have money to pay for a taxi to go to the
hospital," Ms. Angeline recalled, noting that her family
savings at any moment are typically worth about 10 cents.
Her mother, Isabel, says that if the baby still hadn't come
after another day, well, she would have continued to wait. 

Fortunately, at that moment Katrin Blackert, a 23-year-old
volunteer for Iris Ministries, an American mission, dropped
by as part of her regular visits to children living at the
dump. Miss Blackert rushed Ms. Angeline to the hospital,
paid the bill for the emergency Caesarean out of her own
pocket (O.K., it was only $4), and saved the life of both
mother and baby. 

The help was extended solely on the basis of need, for Ms.
Angeline doesn't attend church. Moreover, Ms. Angeline is
living in a new home built by Catholic missionaries to
replace her old thatch hut - not because she's a Catholic,
but because she's needy. 

Evangelical missionaries are controversial because they're
very aggressive about gaining converts, so they antagonize
long-established religions and create rifts in communities.
Critics say they're bribing the poor with food to persuade
them to change their faith. 

There is some of that. Iris Ministries offers meals with
its Sunday services, and that's one reason they're well
attended. When local people come to seek cash for medicine
or food, they usually get the handout - but only after they
join in prayer. 

But I'm convinced that we should all celebrate the big
evangelical push into Africa because the bottom line is
that it will mean more orphanages, more schools and, above
all, more clinics and hospitals. Particularly when AIDS is
ravaging Africa, those church hospitals are lifesavers. 

"In most of Africa, these are the cornerstone of the health
system," said Helene Gayle, who directs AIDS work for the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. "In some countries, they
serve more people than the government health system." 

The evangelicals abroad are mostly pragmatists, not
ideologues, so they should be a good influence on the
Christian Right. While fundamentalists in America blindly
oppose condom distribution, evangelicals in Africa see
their friends dying of AIDS. They thunder against sexual
immorality - but often hand out condoms. 

"We don't condone adultery, but we're pragmatic enough to
see the country we live in," said Steven Lazar, who runs
Iris Ministries' orphanage. He notes that in nearly all of
the Christian weddings he attends in Mozambique, the bride
is pregnant. 

One of the evangelicals' most important influences is in
combating the second-class status of women and girls by
evangelizing not only for God, but also for equality of the
sexes. 

Pentecostalists, who make up one of the fastest-growing
sects, preach faith healing and raising from the dead, but
they also give a substantial voice in church to ordinary
village women. And that in turn empowers women in the home
and community. 

"In our Mozambican culture, women don't have an active
voice in the family," explained Ana Zaida, who teaches
Bible school. "But in Christian life, we discover that not
just the husband but also the wife can have a role. . . .
So the wives fight to transform their husbands." 

At the end of my interview, Mr. Lazar prayed for me - and
came pretty close to asking the Almighty to ensure that I
wrote a nice column. The episode underscored the difference
between my world and his. 

Yet while it sounds strange to say so, evangelicals may be
Africa's most important feminist influence today. And how
can one not welcome their growing presence as Ms. Angeline
tells of her rescue and cradles a lovely baby girl - not
surprisingly, named Katrin.�� 

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/27/opinion/27KRIS.html?ex=1065670391&ei=1&en=6f847cb200a8c590


---------------------------------

Get Home Delivery of The New York Times Newspaper. Imagine
reading The New York Times any time & anywhere you like!
Leisurely catch up on events & expand your horizons. Enjoy
now for 50% off Home Delivery! Click here:

http://www.nytimes.com/ads/nytcirc/index.html



HOW TO ADVERTISE
---------------------------------
For information on advertising in e-mail newsletters 
or other creative advertising opportunities with The 
New York Times on the Web, please contact
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or visit our online media 
kit at http://www.nytimes.com/adinfo

For general information about NYTimes.com, write to 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

_______________________________________________
Assam mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/listinfo/assam

Reply via email to