Sunday, February 26, 2017

Somali Mission History


Ministers in Africa started after the Portuguese sailors gradually found and set up settlements along the western shoreline of Africa. The first evangelists were a gathering of the Franciscan monks known as Capuchins. It is assessed that this gathering sanctified through water an expected six hundred thousand Africans. A significant part of the eastern shoreline of Africa, however, was prospering with teacher work. There were an expected twenty mission stations in the field. The Africans trusted that by tolerating Christianity that they would likewise be acknowledged into the Portuguese provincial control, however regularly the Africans were the ones attempting to make the Portuguese and the preachers get along.1



Islam entered the Somali coast in the years that followed the hijra; “the Prophet Muhammad’s migration (622 ce) from Mecca to Medina in order to escape persecution. The date represents the starting point of the Muslim era.”2 The principal agents of Islamization were Arab immigrants, scholars and traders, and later, indigenous teachers. As in Ethiopia, its expansion led to the emergence of small coastal city-states, such as Zeila and Mogadishu. However, the carriers of the new faith preached and lived among predominantly nomadic communities and within a society in which clan or tribal leaders controlled the scarce resources of vast expanses of territory.3 Christianity is a minority religion in Muslim Somalia. The official number of those practicing Christianity is just around 1,000 among the nation's aggregate populace of more than eight million occupants. The genuine number of Christian professionals in Somalia is obscure because of the marvel of Crypto-Christianity among ethnic Somali Muslim believers to Christianity. The genuine name of the private section of Somali Christian specialists, notwithstanding, is obscure. These are crypto-Christians of Somali Muslim backgrounds who have changed over to Christianity clandestinely. Religious abuse of these unofficial Christians has been predominant in Nairobi. Underground Somali holy places can't worship transparently as leaving Islam is a wrongdoing deserving of death in Somalia.



Sean Devereux
Sean Devereux was an English Salesian preacher killed in Kismayo, Somalia in 1993 while working for UNICEF. He has since turned into an outstanding good example for the guide working employment, especially among Christians. Prior to his death, He then started working with UNICEF in Somalia where he was doled out to arrange help for the starving, especially kids, in Kismayo, the fortification of one of the numerous warlords. After just four months in the nation, Devereux was lethally shot in the back of the head by a single employed shooter while strolling close to the UNICEF compound on Saturday, 2 January 1993.4 Italian Catholic nun Sister Leonella Sgorbati, Somalia's Mother Teresa, who had lived in Somalia for forty years, giving medical aid to the poor. In 2006, she was shot in the back outside a Somalia hospital. In 2014, near the capital city of Mogadishu, Abdishakur Yusuf, the leader of five underground Protestant congregations, was shot in the head five times by extremists.5








2. Britannica Academic, s.v. "Hijrah," Accessed February 26, 2017, http://academic.eb.com.ezproxy.liberty.edu/levels/collegiate/article/Hijrah/39809.



3. Ahmed, Hussein. "Reflections on Historical and Contemporary Islam in Ethiopia and Somalia: A Comparative and Contrastive Overview." Journal of Ethiopian Studies 40, no. 1/2 (2007): 261-76. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41988230.






            5. Shea, Nina. "BARBARISM 2014: On Religious Cleansing by Islamists." World                         Affairs 177, no. 4 (2014): 34-46. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43556669.




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