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On Hidden Diaspora Communities, a “Borderless” World, and GLOCAL Initiatives

Auteur: Sadiri Joy Tira
Date: 12.08.2010
Category: Diaspora

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L'original est en anglais

Previously, I have posted about Flying Communities, Floating Communities, and even Isolated Communities.  So a few weeks ago, I curiously went along with four of my Toronto friends to see “hidden communities” in a high-rise condo for sale located in a densely populated area of Toronto; in a compound resembling what the urban missiologist Ray Bakke describes as the "urban jungle."  After all, urbanization (and mega-cities) and government multi-culturalisation policies (multi-cultures) are twin results of diasporas.  Without population movements, there would be no mega-cities or multi-cultural realities.  Thus, evangelism and “church growth” (Donald McGavran) strategies responding to these two issues (current urban/megacities missions, multicultural congregations) are actually addressing realities stemming from the phenomenon of diasporas.

1.  Hidden Diaspora Communities

Anyways, back to the apartment block… The condo apartment we wanted to see was located on the 17th floor overlooking the Toronto south view -- including the CN Tower in downtown. Once, we got inside the elevator, I must admit that I felt I was in a different country.  Nobody spoke to each other so I did not hear a variety of languages, but I smelled evidence of different cuisines as people entered and exited the small space.  Arriving at the 17th floor, I smelled fresh curry intermingled with the scent of fried tortillas!  This apartment block was bursting at the seams with new immigrants from the horn of North East Africa, Central Africa, Central America, among many others.  I don’t know how may nations and language groups are represented in that 25-story building, but I was told there were some 1500 residents in one tower.  In the compound there are three towers; so there must be approximately 4500 people, mostly newly immigrated people, from the so-called unreached regions of our planet representing what the late missiologist Ralph Winter described as the "unreached people groups" (UPGs). 

Then last week (06.08.2010), I had breakfast with a friend, Nigel Paul B., who is directing a fast emerging missions initiative among the UPGs in diasporas living in mega-cities, such as Toronto.  Following breakfast, I said to Nigel:  “I would like to move in to one of those towers!”  He looked me in the eye and said:  “Joy, really?”  To which I responded:  “I am serious but I must convince my wife!”  Again he asked:  “Are you prepared to leave your nice apartment by the Lakeshore?"  I wasn’t kidding.

So, together we returned to the 25-story building.  Once there, Nigel went straight to the door to read the names of the occupants.  He tallied the number of Africans and Middle Eastern people; he can tell where people are from by their names.  But as for me, after counting twenty-five Mohameds and another twelve Rezzas, I stopped!  I was shocked.  These unreached diasporas were hidden in these apartment blocks of my very own Canadian city!  

What can be done?  Surely we cannot ignore the fact that hundreds (on a greater scale of Canada, thousands) of the people we are trying to reach over there are now right here.  I am convinced that we would find this same scenario in other cities such as London, Chicago, Paris, Sydney, and Seoul, etc.  While we pour resources into training and equipping our international workers (i.e. missionaries) to “become all to all people” (i.e. language acquisition, cultural debriefings, visa attainments, etc), we are doing relatively little to motivate and mobilize our people locally to do what we are doing globally.  Instead of intentionally deploying our local workers to our local “urban jungles”, equipping them with cross-cultural training (so they are at least culturally sensitive!), we continue on as we have for eras, expecting newcomers – who do not speak our language or have a firm grasp of our cultural mores, to approach us.  Furthermore, we expect them to immediately adjust to our way of communicating and to our way of doing things.  Obviously, there are two sides of this “adjusting and accepting” coin, but I’m not going to get into that in this article.[1]  I do know that I have been a “foreigner”, and I understand the tendency to group with my kababayan (my countrymen in Pilipino) desperately grasping for “home” in the people representing the homeland I had left behind. 

Mots-clés: urbanization, multiculturalism, diaspora, apartment block, urban jungle, UPG, borderless, GLOCAL, new immigrants, Finishing the Task, unengaged

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PhContributeBy
Répondre Signaler 0 J'aime Je n'aime pas friar58 (1)
États-Unis

Opportunity abounds, and God is Soveriegn.  It is truly ispiring to read of the inginuity and adaptability of you all.  My desire is to reach the some of the same people talked about in this article, but the manner in which you all think outside of the normal boundaries is very inspiring.  My eyes are opening to the possibilties in that exist in my own community, and for that I thank you.


14.04.2011
PhContributeBy
Répondre Signaler 0 J'aime Je n'aime pas VushPorosia (1)
Albanie

[English follows] [SHQIP] Falëminderit, Vëlla Sadiri, për përqëndrimin tënd tek ky fenomen bashkëkohore, diaspora. Në Toronto, p.sh., ka një komunitet Shqiptar në rritje. Shumica erdhën për shkak të vizave të favorshme për intelektuale dhe profisione të dëshirueshme, simbas programit të Kanadasë. Gjithashtu mund të them se shumica prej tyre janë larg Krishtit. Nga Shqipëria mendojmë se si t’i arrijmë ata me ungjillin. Të pakten një Shqiptar tashmë banon andej kryesisht për t’u shërbyer Shqiptarëve të tjerë.

Në GlobaLink-un tonë në Shqipëri, diaspora do të jetë një temë për t’u hetuar si grup besimtarësh dhe kishash, që të hapim fronte të reja shërbesash në shumë mënyra--me të shkuar, me anë të teknologjisë, etj.

Nëse do të takohesh me Shqiptarë andej, Z. Sadiri, bëj ftesë për të pirë një kafe bashkë! Pavarësisht çfarë pini, çaj, kafe, pijë freskuese, është një moment domëthënës për t’u njohur dhe për të nisur një miqësi. Vetem Zoti di ku do të përfundojë!

Zoti ju bekoftë!

[ENGLISH] Thank you, brother Sadiri, for concentrating our attention on this phenomenon of modern times. In Toronto, for example, there is an increasing community of Albanians from both Albania and Kosova. Perhaps most of them have arrived under favorable terms granted by Canada for intellectuals and those in choice professions, representing a significantly higher than average educational level than those left behind in Albania. I would guess that other UPGs there similarly represent higher educational groups from their places of origin. Most of the Albanians who have arrived in Toronto (as well as other places) have never learned who Christ is.

At least one Albanian, with his family, have bucked the trend of seeking merely employment and an increased economic standard in the west. Their main reason for being in Canada is to bring the gospel to their fellow countrymen who have left the fatherland to seek a better life.

In our upcoming GlobaLink Albania, we will be prominently featuring diaspora topics during and after the Lausanne III Cape Town event. We will be thinking about how to tie in efforts initiated from here in Albania, with those carried out by the small handful of believers living in communities of diaspora Albanians around the world, including in your back yard.

If you meet Albanians, invite them to "drink a coffee" with you. Even if you drink something else, such as tea, get to know them. They have time on their hands for true friendship! Only God knows where this will take you. Blessings from Albania!


28.09.2010
PhContributeBy
Répondre Signaler 0 J'aime Je n'aime pas gatheredscattered (1)  
Canada
@ VushPorosia:

I appreciate your observation about the Albanians living in Toronto and elsewhere in the world. Surely, these Albanians who once residents of the most resistant and atheist state, are now with in our reach. Praise God for bringing them to our "hidden communities." Hidden but at least we know now that they are there.
 
What puzzle me is this: when they are in Albania, they are subjects of evangelism, but since arriving in Canada, they are no longer consider unreached! There seems to be a descripancy --- huge gap and disconnect in our missions thinking and practice! It is time for the evangelical mission agencies and denominations rethink and overhaul their missions strategies. I have been saying all along that Diaspora missions must be glocal and multi-directional ie. what we do in Albania must be done among Albanians in Toronto. Missions must no longer over there but also over here at the same time.
 
Brother, I am thrilled to know that GLOBALLINK Albania will be "predominantly featuring Diaspora." May I encourage you to mobilize your Albanian geographers and demographers to track down where the largest Albanian communities outside your country. Once you have the information, let us call an ALL Balkan Diaspora Consultation somewhere to discuss and pray together how we address your own diaspora needs. The let us ask God to guide and direct us. We will use the LCWE Diaspora network and platform to get into this exciting opportunity to reach the once most difficult people to reach. The Lord seems to ope the door to get more Albanians into the Kingdom.
 
Yes, I like coffee very much, but this must come from Starbucks. Will you be in Cape Town? Let us connect. I like working with people like you. Blessings.
 


10.10.2010
PhContributeBy
Répondre Signaler 0 J'aime Je n'aime pas samuelbandela (0)
États-Unis

Dr. Sadiri Joy Tira, I am Sam Bandela from Atlanta, GA, USA. For one reason or the other my name is not showing up and hope I’ll be able to fix that. By the way, my particular interest is in the "Indian Diaspara" I read your document on "Flying Community" Sam Bandela


09.09.2010
PhContributeBy
Répondre Signaler 0 J'aime Je n'aime pas gatheredscattered (1)  
Canada
@ samuelbandela:

Sam, be assued that your comments are deeply appreciated. Please connect with people like Dr. TV Thomas and Mr. Sam George. Perhaps you know them already but both men are South Asians, who are experts on Indian Diaspora. They also have files and files of great ideas. Blessings in all that you are doing for the Kingdom.


10.10.2010
PhContributeBy
Répondre Signaler 0 J'aime Je n'aime pas nigelpaulb (0)
Canada

Praise God for what He is doing.

Around the world, God is beckoning His body to move into communities of need.  It is a joy to be one small part of that in MoveIn (www.movein.to).  John 1:14 says that "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us" (KJV).  Or, as the Message paraphrase puts it, "The Word became flesh and blood and moved into the neighbourhood."  This is actually quite biblical; from the Old Testament tabernacle, which represented God’s presence in the middle of the Israelite camp; to the way in which God, in Christ, walked among us.  For 33 years, the Creator of the universe dwelt among us.

It comes as no surprise then that God calls us to the same thing.  He commands us to love Him with everything we have, and makes it clear that the best way we can do that is to "love our neighbour as we love ourselves."  Lev 19:18, Matt 22, Rom 13:9, Gal 5:14, James 2:8.

What do these commandments look like in light of peoples on the move?  How can we love the Global Diaspora "as our neighbour"?  How can we love the nations who are moving in among us in keepin with the Second Commandment?

Let us become neighbours, in order to love as neighbours. Let us move in.


14.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Répondre Signaler 0 J'aime Je n'aime pas gatheredscattered (1)  
Canada
@ nigelpaulb:

I am praying for more people to MoveIn to many depressed and migrant communities in Mega Cities.


10.10.2010

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