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De Hemptinne, the Benedictines and Catholic Assimilation on the Congolese Copperbelt, 1911–1960

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2022

REUBEN A. LOFFMAN*
Affiliation:
School of History, Queen Mary, University of London, Arts Two, 3.32, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS

Abstract

This article explores the history of the Benedictines in south-eastern Congo. The Benedictine leader, Jean-Félix De Hemptinne, eschewed an adaptationist approach to his mission work in favour of an assimilationist one. This article explains why he was able to follow such an approach for so long. Two factors were paramount. First, what Chris Bayly described as ‘lateral connections’ enabled De Hemptinne to side-step the need to engage meaningfully with local agricultural knowledge. Secondly, De Hemptinne's close if turbulent relationship with the colonial state facilitated a supply of funds and African labour despite the difficulties the Benedictines had in converting local people.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2022

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Footnotes

Many thanks to the School of History at Queen Mary University of London, David Maxwell, Miri Rubin, Saul Dubow, Luc Vints, Miles Larmer, Eva Schalbroeck, Ana Lucia Araujo, Evergton Sales Souza and Stuart Schwartz.

References

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10 I am grateful to one of the anonymous referees for this insight.

11 Reuben Loffman, Church, state, and colonialism in south-eastern Congo, 1890–1962, Basingstoke 2019.

12 Jehu J. Hanciles, Migration and the making of global Christianity, Grand Rapids, Mi 2021, 408.

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18 Pierre Legrand and Benoit Thoreau, Les Bénédictines au Katanga: vingt-cinq ans d'apostalat (1910-1935), Lophem-Lez-Bruges 1935, 17. The Benedictines kept sugar mills in Brazil: Stuart B. Schwartz, ‘The plantations of St Benedict: the Benedictine sugar mills of Colonial Brazil’, The Americas xxxix/1 (1982), 1–22.

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34 Ibid.

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36 Jean-Félix De Hemptinne, letter, 10 Dec. 1910, Nguba, KADOC, Jean-Félix De Hemptinne (DH) 3.2.1, 4.

37 Polémique, ‘Les Bénédictines au Katanga’, SA, KAT, 1910–22.

38 Polémique, ‘Au Katanga: la famine et la mort’, ibid.

39 Polémique, ‘Les Bénédictines au Katanga’, ibid.

40 Ibid.

41 Ibid.

42 Legrand and Thoreau, Les Bénédictines au Katanga, 22–31.

43 Loffman, Church, state, and colonialism, 63–118.

44 Godfrey Sieber, The Benedictines of Inkamana, Sankt Ottilien, Eresing 1995, 7.

45 Schalbroeck, ‘Centre stage’, 105.

46 Legrand and Thoreau, Les Bénédictines au Katanga, 37.

47 Loffman, Church, state, and colonialism.

48 Legrand and Thoreau, Les Bénédictines au Katanga, 47.

49 Ibid.

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53 Legrand and Thoreau, Les Bénédictines au Katanga, 55.

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56 Jean-Félix De Hemptinne, Un Tournant de notre politique indigène – le décret du 5 Décembre 1933, Bruxelles 1935, 29.

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61 Ibid. 58.

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63 Despite his not at all liking the drink, we are told, the Benedictine brother concerned drank it in order to help the evangelisation process along: Legrand and Thoreau, Les Bénédictines au Katanga, 62.

64 It seems that in the early twentieth century, Catholics were better at speaking local languages than Protestants such as William Burton, who were more reliant on local interpreters. De Hemptinne, for example, must have been conversant in Sanga to translate the catechism into this language.

65 Legrand and Thoreau, Les Bénédictines au Katanga, 40. De Hemptinne corresponded with Roelens throughout his time in the Congo: Victor Roelens to Jean-Felix De Hemptinne, 27 Jan. 1913, SA, KAT, 1910–22.

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73 Marvin D. Markowitz, Cross and sword: the political role of Christian missions in the Congo, 1908–1960, Stanford, Ca 1973.

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78 Crawford moved away from Garanganze shortly after the death of the Yeke chief M'Siri in 1891 but there were still a number of Protestants in Bunkeya by the time the Benedictines arrived there.

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81 Chroniques: Lukafu et Elisabethville, Lukafu (L), 1924–44, SA, KAT, 4.

82 Ibid. 5.

83 Loffman, Church, state and colonialism, 74.

84 Statistiques scolaires de la mission bénédictine, 1924, AAB, M, 629.

85 Rémunération du personnel indigène des ecoles subsidiables, Ordre de Saint Benoit, 1951, ibid. 651.

86 Chroniques: Lukafu et Elisabethville, Lukafu (L), 1924–44, SA, KAT, 6.

87 Ibid.

88 Histoire Miscellanées (HM), Rapport de 1930 de la Mission Saint Thérèse de Bunkeya, SA, KAT, 2.

89 Ibid.

90 Yolanda Covington-Ward, Gesture and power: religion, nationalism, and everyday performance in Congo, Durham, NC 2016, 71–106; Wyatt MacGaffey, Kongo political culture: the conceptual challenge of the particular, Bloomington, In 2000, 27.

91 Document justificatif d'une intervention de la colonie dans les frais de construction d'une ecole pour filles noirs à Kapolowe, 1949, AAB, M+E, 34.

92 A. Mutombo Mwana, L’Évangélisation de ‘l'Archdiocèse de Lubumbashi, 1910–1986, n.p. 1986, 14.

93 Revd John McKendree Springer, ‘Hand picked in Africa’ (1920), 3, General Commission on Archives and History for the United Methodist Church, Drew University, articles by John McKendree Springer, H: 20 (1979–2002), 1003–4–2:3.

94 Schalbroeck, ‘Centre stage’, 105–47.

95 Hanciles, Migration and the making of global Christianity, 408.

96 Ibid.