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CHRISTIANITY,
POVERTY, IGNORANCE AND DESPAIR IN AFRICA: FIVE
STORIES
By Betty Wamalwa Muragori
Part 2
Story One: God and Terror in Africa
I went to a service the other day in one of the many
churches of unknown derivation that have sprung up
on the continent. I joined relatives and friends to
inter a loved one. The pastor, during his fearsome
sermon, basically threatened the congregation. He
told us that if we did not repent and ask God for
forgiveness for our sinful and wayward ways we would
be in trouble in the hour of need. He said when we
did remember God, God would not hear us, instead God
would laugh long and loud and reject us.
I was not really listening to the sermon as I
expected to hear nothing of value, but these words
jolted me out of my torpor and I began to listen. I
was alarmed at the god to whom I was being
implicated in worshiping. It was one with a very
small g, one that laughed at people in want.
Sometimes when I hear the values and ideas that are
portrayed in our discourse on God, I think we
actually displaced God with the devil without
knowing it. This was one such time. At best we are
praying to a small mean god who laughs at our sorrow
and has an insatiable appetite for being worshiped
and for adulation. It appears as if in fact this god
put us on this earth to do nothing but worship him
and his outsized ego. To me this god sounds more
like a golden calf. That is not my God. During the
sermon in question, no one protested. It is not
done. We all just hang our heads and allowed
ourselves to be led to the devil or any other
dubious deity without a whimper. And if anyone could
have had the guts to whimper, there is a high
likelihood that he or she would have been vigorously
silenced.
There is a terror of God in this scenario that is
sad. I myself have experienced this terror of God
and religious institutions. And listening to many
people speak about God this fear appears to be
widespread. I still remember as a child hearing
about the Christian hell and the terrible fires of
hell. The God of my childhood was an angry God
always ready to bring down terrible retribution on
the heads of sinners. Every day I counted my sins
and weighed whether I deserved heaven or hell if I
were to die in the night. I always found the sins
far outweighed my good deeds. No wonder I was so
terrified as a child.
Story Two: Religion in the Village of Poverty
My friend went to her rural home on vacation. One
day a group of young men who declared themselves to
be men of God, came into the village. They walked
into people’s compounds and told the people in those
homes that they were men of God. I can just see them
arriving in a group and fanning out throughout the
village in swift battle ready formation. They said
something like God had sent them and that they were
there to get rid of sin, cleanse sinners through
prayer as there was a great deal of sin all over
that village which had made God annoyed at the
villagers who had reacted by withdrawing his
blessings from the village. There was a need for
collective prayer to get rid of it. That’s what they
said in public.
One of the confidence tricks they used was to
isolate individual women, from whom they then
demanded alms, to do God’s work, of course. They
asked first for cash money, when this was not
forthcoming they said they also accepted payment in
the form of agricultural produce or small stock
including chickens or goats. The isolated woman
played with her own mind and convinced herself that
it was her duty to save the village from sin and
damnation. Or whatever individual fiction she
invented, that made it easier for her to part with
the fruits of her own hard work. The "trick
isolation" prevented those skeptical few who may
have questioned the need for such alms, from
infecting the other women with their skepticism.
My friend is used to the con games of Nairobi so she
recognized one such game in its budding stage and
tried to warn the other women. The women turned on
her and said that they wanted to get rid of the sin
which was causing bad luck to befall them and that
she would chase the young men away and the blessings
they had brought for the village, if she persisted
in opposing them. The women were sufficiently
hostile to her and managed to shut her up.
A few days later after the young men had gone and
the women had reflected on what had actually
happened and more and more of them let slip about
being asked for money and chickens, doubt started to
flit across their consciousness and some of the
women began to realize that they might have been
conned. A few went to my friend and shared their
concerns with her but the others decided to brazen
it and refused to give credence to their secret
fears. You can rest assured this village will be
conned again and again with the active connivance of
the women in particular.
The village that my friend comes from is poor like
most African villages. Life is hard like it was in
Europe in the Dark Ages. What I have found about
poverty is that it is isolating in so many ways. It
makes a person believe that he/she is special and
alone in being prone to bad things. They then make
up reasons for the bad things, calling it bad luck
or a product of sin or due to breach of taboos. The
family, which loses several children before the age
of five, believes that it is happening only to them.
They don’t know that this is a “normal” statistic in
their community. The children whose parents die at
the age of 40 know it is only happening to them.
They don’t know that their parents are only
conforming to the life expectancy of their region.
For the family too poor to purchase fertilizers, or
to access safe drinking water, or medicines, know it
happens just to them or to members of their
community alone. They do not read research reports
that analyze their situation. If they did they may
find out that the things happening to them are not
because of the sins that they have committed. Rather
more often their “bad luck” is a product of sins
committed against them by bad leaders or sad
circumstances. A bunch of conmen using
religion—talking about sin being the cause of bad
luck—find fertile ground for their confidence
tricks. These outsiders are simply confirming what
these people already know. This is a place of sin
and bad luck!
Story Three: Electric Shocks as the Hand of God
These events happened in Uganda in the month of July
this year, 2007. A preacher, one of the most
successful charismatic ones, was found with an
electric gadget that administered electric shocks
when he “laid hands” on individual followers who
came to him in need of special prayers because of
the graveness of their bad luck. The gadget was
wired so that the charismatic preacher only received
a small jolt, whilst the flock member got a hefty
shock. The zapped church member would fall down
backwards like a tree that has been felled and start
thrashing and wetting himself/herself exactly as
happens when a person is hit by electricity. Of
course the poor sod or soddess would now have
incontrovertible evidence that he/she had been
touched by the hand of God. The drama sealed the
reputation of the pastor. More and more people
joined the church as the zapping was clear evidence
of the direct communication lines that the
preacher’s had opened with God. “This man is truly
powerful; he has a special channel opened with God!”
The people must have thought quietly to themselves
as they lined up for their very own zapping.
I am not going to say anything more it would be
unfair of me to attack such a fragile target.
Story Four: A Personal Experience of Religion
When I was about twelve years old in the 1970s, I
was captured for two years by a religious group of
unknown provenance. A white woman walked into our
house one day offering religious instruction and my
mother put my younger sister and me into her hands
for two years. After a year I started to become
militant. I wanted to quit my faith and join this
one in which I had been receiving instruction for
one year. I was spurred on by visions of death and
damnation that I was being promised would be my fate
if I did not take my own salvation into my own hands
and insist that my parents allow me to become
baptized a Jehovah’s Witness. My family is Quaker,
which in itself is a rather obscure unknown religion
in these parts.
For the next year I became radicalized as I agitated
with my parents to allow me to change religion. In
the grip of religious zealotry I became fearless and
would engage my father in lengthy arguments first on
religion and then on any subject that caught my
fancy. My mother grew increasingly alarmed and
reprimanded me with the words,
“Don’t talk to your father that way, you are
supposed to listen to your father not argue with
him!” In my culture a daughter was not supposed to
contradict her father and certainly not with such
militancy. Normally my mother could control me with
a look, but this time I would not be stopped.
My father seemed to enjoy his new feisty daughter
and the arguments that we had. On my religious
conversion he remained adamant though, when I
reached 18 I could change religion and join any that
I wished, but not until then. In the end what pried
me free was the start of my teenage years. I started
to develop new interests and being the only person
in my social circle who celebrated the Sabbath on a
Saturday became a test I failed. At last I was free.
I think my growing militancy also alarmed my parents
and the lessons stopped.
I have never talked about this time with my mother.
But imagine giving your children over to a religion
you don’t actually know without question My mother
is a staunch Christian and I wonder whether she knew
that Jehovah’s Witnesses do not believe in Christ,
and that they are not Christians.
Yet it turned out well. The two-year sojourn into
new religious territories, which were totally
different from the ones I had known until then,
actually freed me. I was no longer afraid of God
because I came to realize that it was people just
like me who were interpreting the Bible and
inventing their own God. This freedom allowed me to
start a journey of exploration about religion and
then many other areas. It brought me closer to my
father by allowing us both to overcome the cultural
taboos that created distance between a father and a
daughter and we built genuine communication, which
we have never lost. The most important thing is it
gave me a self-confidence that I have never lost.
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