Racial Integration in the Church of Apartheid

Racial Integration in the Church of Apartheid

Author: Marthe Hesselmans

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2018-11-01

Total Pages: 286

ISBN-13: 9004385010

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Racial Integration in the Church of Apartheid relates the struggle of South Africa’s Reformed churches to overcome their apartheid past and merge into one multiracial church. It uncovers the potential of faith communities and their limits in untangling religious-nationalist affiliations.


Inverting the Norm: Racially-Mixed Congregations in a Segregationist State

Inverting the Norm: Racially-Mixed Congregations in a Segregationist State

Author: Galjoen Press

Publisher: Lulu.com

Published: 2007-12-17

Total Pages: 262

ISBN-13: 0615172237

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Inverting the Norm describes how a few Christian congregations in apartheid South Africa achieved racial integration despite the state's legal enforcement of segregation. The book analyzes how this paradoxical racial integration, alongside state segregation, relates to historical shifts in global and national norms.


Apartheid and the Church: Report

Apartheid and the Church: Report

Author: Study Project on Christianity in Apartheid Society. Church Commission

Publisher:

Published: 1972

Total Pages: 122

ISBN-13:

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Report commenting on the implications of Apartheid legislation for the Protestant Church in South Africa R and on racial discrimination within the Church - includes recommendations to Church authorities for the social integration of Africans, and explains Christian doctrine with regard to basic human rights.


Afrikaners and the Boundaries of Faith in Post-Apartheid South Africa

Afrikaners and the Boundaries of Faith in Post-Apartheid South Africa

Author: Annika Björnsdotter Teppo

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2021-09-30

Total Pages: 169

ISBN-13: 1000441687

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This book examines the shifting moral and spiritual lives of white Afrikaners in South Africa after apartheid. The end of South Africa’s apartheid system of racial and spatial segregation sparked wide-reaching social change as social, cultural, spatial and racial boundaries were transgressed and transformed. This book investigates how Afrikaners have mediated the country’s shifting boundaries within the realm of religion. For instance, one in every three Afrikaners used these new freedoms to leave the traditional Dutch Reformed Church (NGK), often for an entirely new religious affiliation within the Pentecostal or Charismatic churches, or New Religious Movements such as Wiccan neopaganism. Based on long-term ethnographic fieldwork in the Western Cape area, the book investigates what spiritual life after racial totalitarianism means for the members of the ethnic group that constructed and maintained that very totalitarianism. Ultimately, the book asks how these new Afrikaner religious practices contribute to social solidarity and integration in a persistently segregated society, and what they can tell us about racial relations in the country today. This book will be of interest to scholars of religious studies, social and cultural anthropology and African studies.


Sowing in Tears

Sowing in Tears

Author: John Lamola

Publisher: African Books Collective

Published: 2021-07-16

Total Pages: 479

ISBN-13: 1990931308

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A historicist interpretation of how the Christian religion, whose theology had notoriously been used to foster coloniality and explicitly nurture apartheid philosophy, had transformed itself into an intellectual force and an organisational bulwark of the struggle for freedom in South Africa. This is presented through documents and statements of the ecumenical movement which attest to the development of successive theological positions that were being arraigned against the apartheid regime. The reflection covers the period from the year 1960, which signaled the beginning of an identifiable Christian tradition of protest against political oppression and repression in South Africa, that is, from the Cottesloe Conference following the Sharpeville Massacre, to the 'Standing for the Truth Campaign' on the eve of FW De klerk's February 2 1990 Speech in Parliament. The gallant resistance of the people and the churches of South Africa is presented here as both a living record of the tumultuous past, and an inspiration for new local and global struggles.


Black and Reformed

Black and Reformed

Author: Allan Aubrey Boesak

Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers

Published: 2015-07-14

Total Pages: 189

ISBN-13: 1498226426

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These essays represent a forceful, relentless engagement with the political, social, economic, and theological pillars upon which South African apartheid rested. In the renewed struggles against global apartheid, Boesak's writings, in their theological grounding and with their social and political challenge, come across as alive, relevant, and powerful as they were in the struggle against South African apartheid, offering valuable insights and lessons for ongoing justice struggles today.