“Mission in Zululand”- Report from a research conference

The South African history is so dramatic. Historians are taking part in ongoing processes where past events are re-interpreted and history rewritten. Debates on history in South Africa are not restricted to theoretical discussions by scholars alone, the debates concerns everyone. Kristin Fjelde Tjelle, PhD-student at MHS, has just arrived from South Africa where she together with Professor Odd Magne Bakke participated at the conference "Mission in Zululand".

It's exiting and really inspiring to meet South African historians, she continues. The conference was initiated by the research project Norwegian mission and cultural interactions in South Africa and Madagascar, 1880-1960 (NMCI), and found place 5. - 6. November 2009 in Pietermaritzburg. Besides Tjelle and Bakke from MHS, there were two historians from the University of Stavanger and six historians from the University of KwaZulu Natal participating. Anglican, Congregationalist, Catholic and Lutheran mission efforts in Zululand were presented at the conference, and the speakers discussed as various issues as medical missions, indigenous clergy, religious conversion, missionary masculinity and missionaries' perceptions and re-presentations of Africa/Zululand and the Africans/Zulus.

The Ncome monument commemorates the fallen Zulu warriors at the battle of Blood River in 1838.
The Boer memorial of the victory at Blood River 16. January 1838
Published: 2009‑11‑12

The studies at MHS have been very useful. In my present job at the Police office in Stavanger I daily meet people from different parts of the world. I took both a bachelor and a master degree at MHS. I feel that my background has helped me a lot in my job in the Police.

Øzlem Anli

Calendar

Fri Mar 2nd
► 223

MHS Board Meeting

Wed Mar 14th – 15th
► Sølvberget, Stavanger

Conference about Reintegration of Child Soldiers

Thu Mar 22nd 11:00 AM
► MHS

Career day at MHS

Fri Apr 20th
► 223

MHS Board Meeting