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Ducking Missionary Conflict – in Africa and beyond

Author: Jim Harries
Date: 30.06.2010
Category: Partnership, Poverty and Wealth, Resource Mobilization

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Originally Posted in English

This article first appeared in the July 2009 issue of Evangelical Missions Quarterly (EMQ).

Inter-personal conflicts frequently trouble missionary endeavours. Solutions advocated often emphasise the importance of missionary relationships. Without discrediting those ‘solutions’, I want to ask whether Western mission strategies in ‘poor’ areas of the world themselves result in a high likelihood of conflict?

I suggest that much conflict peculiar to the mission field can be traced back to wealth and power imbalances between Euro-Americans and nationals of poor countries. Classically, new personnel condemn old-hands for their failure to share closely with poor nationals. Pressure from the West increasingly encourages wealth-sharing as a part of evangelism.

Wealth-sharing is nowadays written into almost all Western missionary endeavours to the Third World. This can be subsidised medical provision, scholarships for theological education, financial support for church buildings, provision of free literature, instruction in computing and so on. The patron-client relationships created by such activities significantly impact interaction with nationals. The latter can be embarrassed by their increasingly gross dependence. At the same time they are wary not to communicate that which could undermine the charity that makes them prosper.

Linguistic usages tend to follow the contours of economic domination. That is, European languages become strong where there is material dependence on European peoples. Recipients soon learn that knowledge of the foreign language is lucrative. In much of Africa this trend has become deeply ingrained. Many African countries’ formal operations are carried out in foreign (to them) languages. It has become ‘normal’ for missionaries to operate in their language (especially English-speakers) even when in ‘foreign parts’. What implications does this have for inter-missionary conflict?

Neither the material dependency or linguistic-harmonisation described above are new to the history of mankind. But, recent technological advances of many kinds are new. State-funded near-universal education in Western languages, availability of books, television, the radio and so on, nowadays allow ‘poor’ citizens around the world to learn European languages without contact with Europeans. So then they learn them in their way. European languages are increasingly being used by non-Western people as native tongues, meaning that English words are given meanings rooted in very un-English contexts. The cultural content of the European language used in communication between missionary and foreign national as a result is less and less familiar to the missionary. Language barriers, the crossing of which require cultural learning, are no longer there. But, use of the same language that is underpinned by vastly different cultures, may not be achieving mutual understanding.

Major sources of conflict arise as missionaries acquire different depths of cultural understanding. Uninformed Western personnel on hearing familiar ‘sounds’ (words), will attach familiar meanings from their source cultures. More knowledgeable missionaries will have learned the ‘actual’ meaning of what is being said. (A classic example of this is time. What does it mean to say that a meeting in rural Africa will begin at 10.00am?) Yet in most cases at least, there is no provision for translation from one English to another, or even formal recognition of this problem. Instead, assumed meanings clash and missionaries are at odds.

Keywords: conflict, resources, money, language, missionary, Africa, poverty, relationships

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