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Christianity in SudanAndrew C. Wheeler |
Mohammedanism is gaining ground everywhere here. Under the Belgian regime in the Lado Enclave, the country and government were frankly pagan. Since the Anglo-Egyptian government has taken over, they have poured some 500 Mohammedan soldiers and officials into every position of authority in the country besides a certain number of traders. [43]It was to counter this tendency that the Southern Policy was developed in the 1920s. In the meantime, Shaw was resolved to establish a Christian presence in the Enclave. In 1917, Rev Paul Gibson was sent to Yei amongst the Kakwa People. Gibson commenced an important education work there. In 1920, a school was opened al Juba on the banks of the Nile, then just a small village but now the main town of the South. In 1920, also educational work was begun al Kajo-Kaji amongst the Kuku on the border with Uganda. Completing a hectic year of advance, a few days before Christmas in 1920 Kenneth Fraser and his wife Eileen arrived at Lui amongst the Moro people to begin impressive medical work. By 1920, CMS, largely due to Shaw's effort, had demonstrated its determination to play an active part in evangelizing Southern Sudan, in developing education and medical work, and certainly in Shaw's perception holding back the advance of Islam. These centers, established in the Lado Enclave between 1913 and 1920 have become the heartland of the Episcopal Church of the Sudan. The vigorous branches of that Church are those clustered around the Bari language dialects (Bari, Kakwa and Kuku with their centers respectively in Juba, Yei and Kajo-Kaji), those that in some sense came within the Azande military empire (the Azande, the Baka, the Mundu and a number of smaller tribes centered on Yambio and Maridi) and those groups who speak one of the Moro dialects or regard Moro culture and language as dominant (the different Moro clans, the Avokaya, the Morokodo, and the different Jur groups, centered on Lui, Mundri and Amadi). There has been consistent CMS and Episcopal Church work amongst the Dinka tribes, notably at Malek amongst the Bor Dinka and at Rumbek amongst the Agaar Dinka, as well as other centers. But on the whole, little impression was made on the intricate and delicately balanced Dinka cultural and socio-economic system. Only in the 1960s in the first civil war were large numbers of Dinka converted to Christian faith, and then it was young men in the towns. Reports persist during the current civil war of great growth in the Christian communities deep in the countryside. In both cases, church growth can be related to the dislocation of war and its impact on the cohesion of rural religious and socio-economic systems.
Meetings were carried on from early evening until three a.m. and four a.m. the following morning. Confessions and the beating of breasts and wailing, eager, excited prayer and praise, many people praying at the same time, were all evidenced at these meetings. Later on, inner voices, dreams and visions began to be manifested… [45]Repentance and restored fellowship were the key-notes of the revival, as they were of the East African Revival, happening simultaneously in Uganda and Rwanda, but with no direct relationship. The movement spread rapidly around Yambio and when Jones was invited to preach at Nugent School at Loka (the senior CMS School in Southern Sudan), a similar movement of confession and repentance occurred. Jones' career was, however, to be very brief. Colonial authorities were worried by such a movement amongst the people and by Jones' "instability." A chief in Yambio was threatened that he would die if he did not repent. His ensuing death forced the District Commissioner, Major Wyet, to take action. However, before his residence permit could be withdrawn, Jones decided to leave. He had been in Sudan less than three months. He had been the catalyst, but no more than that, of a movement that continues to invigorate the Church in Sudan even today. The revival movement in Yambio, narrow and exclusive, soon collapsed amid accusations of moral failure. However, schoolboys from Loka carried the message back to Lui and the Moru country. Here, like Jones in Yambio, they were merely catalysts to a movement that rapidly outgrew their contribution. Dreams and visions occurred widely amongst the Moru people. Worship centers were founded, plans made, mission and colonial authorities defied in response to countless compelling visions. I have collected the testimony of various men and women in Moru country and nearly all deny the contribution of Matio Jere and Peter Dabai (the Loka schoolboys) as being decisive, referring rather to the overwhelming authority of visions they received. One of the Loka teachers, a Dinka named John Majak, was transferred to Akot, the new station amongst the Agaar Dinka. His arrival coincided with that of a new missionary, John Collinson. Collinson's evangelical spirituality resonated strongly with Jon Majak's new experience, and together they preached and saw a movement of revival similar to that which had taken place at Yambio, and amongst the Moru. It was, however, more fragile than that amongst the Moru and it did not survive the civil war of 1955 to 1972 when the church and town of Akot was destroyed. Today it is only among the Moro that this particular revival tradition survives, and here it still has the capacity to attract and motivate young people.
| 1900 | 1970 | 1975 | 1980 | 2000* | |
| Christians | 2,375 | 1,165,786 | 1,507,370 | 1,939,300 | 4,488,000 |
| % of Population | 0% | 7.4 | 8.3 | 9.1 | 11.5 |