The African chief converted to Christianity by Dr. Livingstone
By Stephen
Tomkins, BBC News, 18 March 2013
It is 200 years since the birth of David Livingstone, perhaps the most famous of the missionaries to visit Africa in the 19th century. But as author and Church historian Stephen Tomkins explains, the story of an African chief he converted is every bit as incredible as Livingstone’s.
It is 200 years since the birth of David Livingstone, perhaps the most famous of the missionaries to visit Africa in the 19th century. But as author and Church historian Stephen Tomkins explains, the story of an African chief he converted is every bit as incredible as Livingstone’s.
According to
the title of one biography, David Livingstone was “Africa’s Greatest
Missionary”.
This is an
interesting claim about the Lanarkshire-born man, considering that estimates of
the number of people he converted in the course of his 30-year career vary
between one and none.
The variation
is because Livingstone himself wrote off his one convert as a backslider within
months of his baptism.
But this man on
whom Livingstone gave up became a preacher, a leader and a pioneer of adapting
Christianity to African life—to the great annoyance of other European
missionaries.
His name was
Sechele, and he was the kgosi or chief of the Bakwena tribe, part of the Tswana
people, in what is now Botswana.
Born in 1812,
he was 10 when his father, the previous kgosi, was killed. Two of his uncles
divided the tribe between them. Sechele escaped with a few followers into the
desert for nine years, and returned to oust one of his uncles.
This was how
things stood when Sechele first met Livingstone—he ruled a half-tribe.
Livingstone persuaded him to make peace with his other uncle by sending him a
gift of gunpowder for his rifle.
The uncle was
suspicious that the gunpowder was bewitched, tried to neutralise it with fire,
and in the resulting explosion was killed. Sechele thus ruled over a reunited
Bakwena.
Like many
kgosi, Sechele was keen to have a missionary living in his town. Missionaries
came with guns (and powder), making them an invaluable defence, and with
medicine. But the thing Sechele wanted above all from Livingstone was literacy.
He learned the
alphabet, upper and lower case, in two days, compiled his own spelling books,
and set about reading the one book in the Tswana language, the Bible. He ate
breakfast before sunrise in order to start school as quickly as possible, and
then taught his wives to read.
As Sechele grew
increasingly interested in Christianity, he found two huge barriers in his way.
One was rain.
Tswana tribes
had rainmakers, whose job was to use magic to make the rain come. Livingstone,
like all missionaries, vehemently opposed rainmaking, on both religious and
scientific grounds.
Sechele
happened to be his tribe’s rainmaker as well as kgosi, and Livingstone’s stay
coincided with the worst drought ever known, so Sechele’s decision to stop
making rain was predictably unpopular.
The greater
problem was polygamy. Sechele had five wives, and Livingstone insisted that to
become a Christian he needed get rid of the “superfluous” ones. This was a
political as well a personal nightmare, threatening the political structure of
the tribe and relations with other tribes.
But in 1848
Sechele divorced four of the women and was baptised. The following year,
however, one of his exes became pregnant, and it turned out that Sechele had
fallen. He repented, and told Livingstone: “Do not give me up because of this.
I shall never give up Jesus. You and I will stand before him together.”
Livingstone
went north to embark upon his celebrated adventures.
For European
missionaries Sechele was a frustrating puzzle, ‘a half Christian and a half
heathen’”
Their last
contact was in 1852. Sechele had fought off an attack from the Transvaal Boers,
and was en route to Britain to ask Queen Victoria’s protection. He got as far
as the Cape before being turned back.
At this point,
Sechele largely disappears from view. His reappearance was startling.
The first
British missionaries who arrived to work with the Zulu Ndebele tribe in what is
now Zimbabwe in 1859 were staggered to find that they already had regular
Christian prayers. Sechele had beaten them to it.
Sechele had
decided to lead church services for his own people after Livingstone left. He
taught reading, the Bible became popular, and slowly the Bakwena became
Christian.
Sechele
travelled hundreds of miles as a missionary to other tribes, and having
withstood the Boers, the Bakwena became a refuge, absorbing many tribes into
their Christian society.
At his death in
1892, Sechele ruled 30,000 people, a hundred times the number Livingstone first
found him with.
In the
estimation of Neil Parsons, of the University of Botswana, Sechele “did more to
propagate Christianity in nineteenth-century southern Africa than virtually any
single European missionary”.
For European
missionaries though, Sechele was a frustrating puzzle, “a half Christian and a
half heathen”.
He returned to
rainmaking, considering it a political necessity, and late in life returned to
polygamy, marrying a young woman for what do not seem to have been entirely
political reasons.
Missionaries
also strongly objected to his use of traditional charms and purification rites,
and the list of his ancestors on the church wall.
And yet, even
the ones who most hated him admitted, “he reads the Bible threadbare”, and when
confronted he ran scriptural rings around them.
“Roger had to
keep his wits about him,” wrote the missionary Elizabeth Price about her
husband, “or he would have been lost, so wily and cunning is Sechele—murdering
sacred scripture and bringing it to defend him in a way which horrifies and
amazes one. A strange, strange mixture he is.”
The strange
mixture was in fact African Christianity. Unlike other converts who were
content to follow European Christianity, Sechele went back to the source and
recreated it as an indigenous religion.
Hopefully, in
the year of Livingstone’s bicentennial, Sechele will finally get a bit more of
the recognition due to him.
No comments:
Post a Comment