Archive for August, 2009

The Diane Rehm Show: The Crisis in Congo

Thursday, August 13th, 2009



****Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele — Panzi Hospital, South Kivu

Today I joined John Prendergast of the Enough Project on the Diane Rehm Show for a discussion of the crisis in Congo.

Listen to the program.

Edward B. Rackley on Religion and Politics in Congo

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

 ****Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele -- Kimbanguist Children in Equateur

****Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele — Kimbanguist Children in Equateur

By Edward B. Rackley

Unlike in Latin America, where liberation theology was once an influential force, Christians in Africa rarely confront political oppression. On the surface, African Christian institutions claim not to meddle in affairs of the State. These days, ‘conversion of the heathens’ is passé, as Christianity is now a widespread and entrenched belief system. Churches of all denominations offer manifold development initiatives in education, health and agriculture. In many countries where the State has limited reach into rural areas, churches represent the sole link to the outside world for isolated communities.

But it’s only half the story to say that African Christian institutions are above political interests and the establishment of a modern State. Throughout colonial occupation, the Church completed the political and economic triangle that comprised the massive social engineering project of colonialism. Here was a hearts and minds program that worked—colonial control encapsulated Maslow’s entire hierarchy of needs. From material conditions, social space and into the spiritual realm, colonialism repackaged the indigenous African experience and replaced each dimension with a foreign substitute. Little has changed since independence: neither the school curricula nor the political dispensations (despite elections, ‘Big Men’ reign in a colonial style). Formerly vibrant traditional belief systems are now subaltern and syncretistic, fusing in curious ways with imported Christian ideas.