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1

Sakupapa, Teddy Chalwe. "Ethno-Regionalism, Politics and the Role of Religion in Zambia: Changing Ecumenical Landscapes in a Christian Nation, 2015-2018." Exchange 48, no. 2 (May 2, 2019): 105–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1572543x-12341517.

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Abstract This contribution explores the interaction between religion and politics in a religiously plural and ethnically multidimensional Zambian context. Given the political salience of both religion and ethnicity in Zambian politics, this research locates an understudied aspect in the discourse on religion and politics in Zambia, namely the multiple relations between religion, ethnicity and politics. It specifically offers a historical-theological analysis of the implications that the political mobilisation of religion has for ecumenism in Zambia since Edgar Chagwa Lungu became the country’s president (2015-2018). Underlining the church-dividing potential of non-theological (doctrinal) factors, the article argues that the ‘political mobilisation of religion’ and the ‘pentecostalisation of Christianity’ in Zambia are reshaping the country’s ecumenical landscapes. Accordingly, this contribution posits the significance of ecumenical consciousness among churches and argues for a contextual ecumenical ecclesiology.
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Sugishita, Kaori. "Traditional Medicine, Biomedicine and Christianity in Modern Zambia." Africa 79, no. 3 (August 2009): 435–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/e0001972009000904.

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The World Health Organization has recognized ‘traditional medicine’ as ade factoand economical substitute for biomedicine in the developing world. Accordingly, the Zambian government aims to integrate ‘traditional healers’, locally known asng'anga, with their biomedical counterparts in a national health care system. Hence, on the one hand,ng'angaelaborate their practice into ‘herbalism’, which could meet scientific standards and fit into the scope of biomedicine. On the other hand, they continue to deal with affliction by positing the existence of occult agents, such as witchcraft and spirits, at the risk of being criticized for exploiting indigenous beliefs. As a result, manyng'angaassociate themselves with Christianity, the national religion of Zambia, which serves as an official domain of the occult where they take refuge from biomedical rationalization. However, conventional churches, the government and health authorities do not approve of the link between Christianity and traditional medicine; henceng'angaas traditional healers are marginalized in modern, Christian Zambia. Being thus dissociated from the national religion,ng'angaare officially confined to the periphery of national health care, where they submit to the primacy of biomedicine and the workings of state power.
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Klinken, Adriaan van. "Homosexuality, Politics and Pentecostal Nationalism in Zambia." Studies in World Christianity 20, no. 3 (December 2014): 259–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/swc.2014.0095.

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Building upon debates about the politics of nationalism and sexuality in post-colonial Africa, this article highlights the role of religion in shaping nationalist ideologies that seek to regulate homosexuality. It specifically focuses on Pentecostal Christianity in Zambia, where the constitutional declaration of Zambia as a Christian nation has given rise to a form of ‘Pentecostal nationalism’ in which homosexuality is considered to be a threat to the purity of the nation and is associated with the Devil. The article offers an analysis of recent Zambian public debates about homosexuality, focusing on the ways in which the ‘Christian nation’ argument is deployed, primarily in a discourse of anti-homonationalism, but also by a few recent dissident voices. The latter prevent Zambia, and Christianity, from accruing a monolithic depiction as homophobic. Showing that the Zambian case presents a mobilisation against homosexuality that is profoundly shaped by the local configuration in which Christianity defines national identity – and in which Pentecostal-Christian moral concerns and theo-political imaginations shape public debates and politics – the article nuances arguments that explain African controversies regarding homosexuality in terms of exported American culture wars, proposing an alternative reading of these controversies as emerging from conflicting visions of modernity in Africa.1
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MacGaffey, Wyatt, and Karla Poewe. "Religion, Kinship and Economy in Luapula, Zambia." Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines 26, no. 1 (1992): 168. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/485422.

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5

Mukuka, Bridget N. M. "Rethinking land and religion." Jumuga Journal of Education, Oral Studies, and Human Sciences (JJEOSHS) 1, no. 1 (August 3, 2020): 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.35544/jjeoshs.v1i1.21.

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This article is a by-product of a missiological research that examined the power of naming some congregations in the local language, through the concept of culture in the Mutima Walowa wa Makumbi1 Church popularly known as the Mutima Church of Zambia. The article examines how the founder of the Mutima Church acquired land in the name of religion in many parts of the country. Upon the death of the church founder in February 2015, some of the land has been repossessed by either his own relatives or by the Zambian government. To gain ‘ownership’ of the land, the church founder established some congregations across the country which he named under his own Bemba2 cultural worldview. Critically important is the fact that this research wasconducted in six congregations; and strongly indicates that due to lack of proper documentation, some acres of church land have been repossessed by the government and by some relatives of the church founder who donated it a couple of years ago. To make the research valid, thirty church members were interviewed. They comprised of eleven males, nine females, six male youths and four female youths. Data were collected through in-depth interviews, focus group approach, participant observation and document review. Consequently, guided by the feminist narrative methods of inquiry, the article adopts a qualitative approach to answer a key research question: How does the missional policy of the Mutima Church affect some members’ understanding of land and religion in the power of naming? The above discourse is viewed through the lenses of Michel Foucault (1978) and Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza’s (2009) respectively.
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Ireland, Jerry M. "African Traditional Religion and Pentecostal Churches in Lusaka, Zambia: An Assessment." Journal of Pentecostal Theology 21, no. 2 (2012): 260–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/17455251-02102006.

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This study seeks to discover how African Traditional Religion (ATR) is viewed by Pentecostal church leaders in Lusaka, Zambia. The convenience sample focused on fourteen Pentecostal churches of various denominational affiliations within the city of Lusaka, Zambia. A thirty-one-item survey tool, the Assessment of Traditional Religious Practices (ATRP), was developed and administered to 128 leaders regarding the prevalence of traditional religious practices among their congregants. The ATRP also assessed how these leaders typically respond to concerns related to ATR within their ministerial context. Findings indicated that traditional beliefs and practices continue to persist, though at nominal levels, within these churches. More importantly, a majority of these leaders feel adequately equipped to handle issues related to ATR because they understand their ministerial calling in terms of spiritual empowerment. The study concludes that the challenges presented by ATR regarding Christian discipleship continue to persist in local Pentecostal churches. However, leaders have employed a practical theological understanding of Pentecostalism, allowing them to overcome many of these same challenges.
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7

BRODISH, PAUL HENRY. "AN ASSOCIATION BETWEEN ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND HIV PREVALENCE IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA." Journal of Biosocial Science 45, no. 6 (January 10, 2013): 853–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002193201200082x.

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SummaryThis paper investigates whether ethnic diversity at the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) cluster level predicts HIV serostatus in three sub-Saharan African countries (Kenya, Malawi and Zambia), using DHS household survey and HIV biomarker data for men and women aged 15–59 collected since 2006. The analysis relates a binary dependent variable (HIV positive serostatus) and a weighted aggregate predictor variable representing the number of different ethnic groups within a DHS Statistical Enumeration Area (SEA) or cluster, which roughly corresponds to a neighbourhood. Multilevel logistic regression is used to predict HIV prevalence within each SEA, controlling for known demographic, social and behavioural predictors of HIV serostatus. The key finding was that the cluster-level ethnic diversity measure was a significant predictor of HIV serostatus in Malawi and Zambia but not in Kenya. Additional results reflected the heterogeneity of the epidemics: male gender, marriage (Kenya), number of extramarital partners in the past year (Kenya and Malawi, but probably confounded with younger age) and Muslim religion (Zambia) were associated with lower odds of positive HIV serostatus. Condom use at last intercourse (a spurious result probably reflecting endogeneity), STD in the past year, number of lifetime sexual partners, age (Malawi and Zambia), education (Zambia), urban residence (Malawi and Zambia) and employment (Kenya and Malawi) were associated with higher odds of positive serostatus. Future studies might continue to employ multilevel models and incorporate additional, more robust, controls for individual behavioural risk factors and for higher-level social and economic factors, in order to verify and further clarify the association between neighbourhood ethnic diversity and HIV serostatus.
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8

Sperber, Elizabeth, and Erin Hern. "Pentecostal Identity and Citizen Engagement in Sub-Saharan Africa: New Evidence from Zambia." Politics and Religion 11, no. 4 (June 13, 2018): 830–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1755048318000330.

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AbstractSince the 1980s, Pentecostal and other born again Christian movements have become increasingly prominent in the public spheres of many sub-Saharan African states. A dearth of reliable survey data has constrained investigation of the potential influence of these religious movements on political attitudes and participation. This article analyzes original survey data from Zambia, a majority-Christian nation. These data, from a stratified random sample of 1,500 Zambians, indicate that Pentecostals do in fact share partisan preferences and report higher levels of political interest and participation than other Christians. They are less likely, however, to contact elected officials—a finding that accords with ethnographic accounts of Pentecostal pastors as political interlocutors for their politically mobilized congregations. We further contextualize and explore the external validity of our findings using cross-national survey data collected by the Pew Forum (2010,N = 9,500). We conclude by underscoring the value of further survey research on religion and politics in the region.
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Mwale, Nelly, and Melvin Simuchimba. "Religion and University Education: Emergence of the Christian University Movement in Zambia." Makerere Journal of Higher Education 10, no. 2 (August 6, 2019): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/majohe.v10i2.3.

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10

Engelke, Matthew. "Word, Image, Sound." Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 41, no. 2 (August 1, 2021): 148–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/1089201x-9127011.

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Abstract This essay introduces the special section “Word, Image, Sound,” a collection of essays on public religion and religious publicities in Africa and South Asia. The essays cover case studies in Myanmar, Zambia, Senegal, Rwanda, and Egypt. The introduction situates the essays in relation to the broader fields of work on the public sphere and publics, especially as they relate to recent work in the human sciences that focus on materiality, the senses, and media.
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Van Klinken, Adriaan S. "Men in the Remaking: Conversion Narratives and Born-Again Masculinity in Zambia." Journal of Religion in Africa 42, no. 3 (2012): 215–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700666-12341229.

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AbstractThe born-again discourse is a central characteristic of Pentecostal Christianity in Africa. In the study of African Christianities, this discourse and the way it (re)shapes people’s moral, religious, and social identities has received much attention. However, hardly any attention has been paid to its effects on men as gendered beings. In the study of men and masculinities in Africa, on the other hand, neither religion in general nor born-again Christianity in particular are taken into account as relevant factors in the construction of masculinities. On the basis of a detailed analysis of interviews with men who are members of a Pentecostal church in Lusaka, Zambia, this article investigates how men’s gender identities are reshaped by becoming and being born-again and how born-again conversion produces new forms of masculinity. The observed Pentecostal transformation of masculinity is interpreted in relation to men’s social vulnerability, particularly in the context of the HIV epidemic in Zambia.
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12

White, Luise. "Vampire Priests of Central Africa: African Debates about Labor and Religion in Colonial Northern Zambia." Comparative Studies in Society and History 35, no. 4 (October 1993): 746–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417500018697.

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When I was a girl, I was taught not to gossip by a school game. We would sit in a circle, and someone would whisper a phrase into the ear of the person sitting next to her. By the time the phrase was returned to the first speaker, it was totally deformed—hilarious proof that hearsay distorted facts. I had already published a book based extensively on oral interviews when I realized how insidious this game was, that it rested on two extremely authoritarian principles: Information should be transmitted passively, and no one has the right to alter or amend received statements.
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13

Chiluba, Brian Chanda, and Hastings Shula. "Zambia: Editorial Comment -COVID-19 -Epidemiological Thought on Why Politics and Religion are Compromising the Fight." Journal of Preventive and Rehabilitative Medicine 2, no. 1 (November 24, 2020): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.21617/jprm2020.211.

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One of the good tenets of epidemiology is the fact that it offers skeptical disposition. Institutionalized skepticism is important in science and policymaking.In the case of Zambia,skepticism questions why the proponents of COVID-19guidelines and prescriptions have become the ardent violators of the guidelines they espouse. Such practices among political leaders is paralyzing, especially in contexts of information and messages from WHO at this critical juncture that call for pragmatism-especially with the peak of a pandemic curve and surging infection rate, considering that we do not have additional alternative interventions apart from adhering to non-pharmaceutical interventions such as social distancing, staying at home, wearing masks and hand hygiene. Deliberate and unnecessary political and religious gatherings inaction carries the risk of dire consequences, some of which have already led to suspected COVID-19 deaths of members of parliament and hospitalization of a size able number of political leaders.Despite all these the proceedings of parliament remained active as though COVID-19 is history.Such reckless political gatherings question the governance ethos of public health epidemiology instituted by the same people violating them. Religious leaders are not immune to this vice-a number of COVID-19-related deaths have passed through churches with body viewings being conducted. It should be mentioned that such behaviors have led to preventing action against COVID-19 outrunning evidence, or at least helping evidence to catch up.A myopic continued action of ignoring COVID-19 guidelines by politicians and religious leaders isa disservice to epidemiology.
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Kroesbergen-Kamps, Johanneke. "Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions in Zambian Sermons about the COVID-19 Pandemic." Journal of Religion in Africa 49, no. 1 (December 22, 2020): 73–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700666-12340159.

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Abstract In the contemporary literature about the relationship between religion and COVID-19, vertical as well as horizontal responses can be distinguished. Much of the current literature is based on personal reflection or on quantitative research. This article adds a qualitative research perspective and offers a preliminary analysis of the religious frameworks used by pastors in the Reformed Church in Zambia. Although the pastors acknowledge the need for communal action, their livestreamed services show an emphasis on the vertical dimension, i.e., the relation with God. As this article argues, this can be understood from an African worldview. There is also evidence that the initial vertical dimension of the services shifts to more horizontal concerns as the pandemic progresses.
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Dutton, Edward Croft. "Big Brother, Pilgrimage and the Ndembu of Zambia: Examining the Big Brother Phenomenon through the Anthropology of Religion." Journal of Religion and Popular Culture 12, no. 1 (March 2006): 5. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/jrpc.12.1.005.

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16

Mwale, Nelly, and Melvin Simuchimba. "Religion in Public Life: Rethinking the Visibility and Role of Religion as an Ethical Resource in the Transformation of the Higher Education Landscape in Post-1990 Zambia." Changing Societies & Personalities 3, no. 3 (2019): 207–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/csp.2019.3.3.072.

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17

van Klinken, Adriaan S. "Gay rights, the devil and the end times: public religion and the enchantment of the homosexuality debate in Zambia." Religion 43, no. 4 (October 2013): 519–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0048721x.2013.765631.

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18

Contamina, Ryan. "Symbolism at the Heart of Bantu Traditional Religion (Research conducted in Bantu Land of Republic of Zambia and Republic of Malawi)." Recoletos Multidisciplinary Research Journal 1, no. 2 (December 31, 2013): 93–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.32871/rmrj1301.02.11.

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19

Phiri, Isabel Apawo. "PRESIDENT FREDERICK J.T. CHILUBA OF ZAMBIA: THE CHRISTIAN NATION AND DEMOCRACY." Journal of Religion in Africa 33, no. 4 (2003): 401–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006603322665332.

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AbstractThis paper focuses on the career of Frederick Chiluba from his election as President of Zambia in October 1991 to his renunciation of standing for a third term in April 2001. The paper argues first that, in his book on democracy and in his declaration of Zambia as a Christian nation, Chiluba set up the criteria by which his presidency would be judged and ultimately found wanting. Second, it argues that the Christian nation concept has had the inadvertent consequence of giving evangelicals a clear basis on which to judge Chiluba and the Zambian state, and hence has served as a catalyst for more energetic and extensive evangelical political engagement.
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Kangwa, Jonathan. "Reading The Bible With African Lenses: Exodus 20:1–17 As Interpreted by Simon Kapwepwe." Expository Times 132, no. 11 (June 23, 2021): 465–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00145246211021861.

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The bible has been differently received, read, interpreted and appropriated in African communities. Political freedom fighters in Zambia used the bible to promote black consciousness and an awareness of African identity. The first group of freedom fighters who emerged from the Mwenzo and Lubwa mission stations of the Free Church of Scotland in North Eastern Zambia read and interpreted the bible in a manner that encouraged resistance against colonialism and the marginalization of African culture. This paper adds to current shifts in African biblical scholarship by considering Simon Mwansa Kapwepwe’s interpretation of Exodus 20:1–17 in the context of Zambia’s movement for political and ecclesiastical independence. Kapwepwe belonged to the first group of freedom fighters - fighting alongside Kenneth Kaunda who would become the first President of Zambia. The present paper shows how Kapwepwe brought the biblical text into dialogue with the African context to address urgent issues of his time, including colonialism.
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Lasong, Joseph, Yuan Zhang, Simon Afewerki Gebremedhin, Sampson Opoku, Chrissie Stansie Abaidoo, Tamara Mkandawire, Kai Zhao, and Huiping Zhang. "Determinants of modern contraceptive use among married women of reproductive age: a cross-sectional study in rural Zambia." BMJ Open 10, no. 3 (March 2020): e030980. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030980.

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ObjectiveZambia is among the world’s top 10 countries with higher fertility rate (5.5 births/woman); unmet family planning need for births spacing (14%) and limiting births (7%). Women in rural Zambia (24%) are reported to have unmet need for family planning than those in urban areas (17%). This study was conducted to ascertain factors associated with modern contraceptive use among rural Zambian women.DesignCross-sectional study.SettingRural Zambia.ParticipantsSecondary data of 4903 married or cohabiting rural women (15–49 years) after filtering out the pregnant, urban based and unmarried women from 2013 to 2014 Zambian Demographic and Health Survey (ZDHS) were analysed using SPSS V.22. Multiple logistic regression, Pearson’s χ2and descriptive statistics were performed to examine factors associated with modern contraceptive use.ResultsFactors that were positively associated with contraceptive use were respondent’s education (secondary adjusted ORs (AOR = 1.61, p≤0.002); higher (AOR = 2.39, p≤0.050)), wealth index (middle class, (AOR = 1.35, p≤0.005); rich (AOR = 2.04, p≤0.001) and richest (AOR = 1.95, p≤0.034)), high parity (1–2 (AOR = 5.31, p≤0.001); 3–4 (AOR = 7.06, p≤0.001); 5+ (AOR = 8.02, p≤0.001)), men older than women by <10 years (AOR = 1.50, p≤0.026) and women sensitised about family planning at health facility (AOR = 1.73, p≤0.001). However, old age (40–49 years (AOR = 0.49, p≤0.001)), other religions (Protestants, African traditionalists and Muslims) (AOR = 0.77, p≤0.007), ever had pregnancy miscarried, aborted or stillbirth (AOR = 0.78, p≤0.026) and women without knowledge of number of children husband desires (AOR = 0.71, p≤0.001) were negatively associated with contraceptive use.ConclusionModern contraceptive use in rural Zambia among currently married women of reproductive age group is relatively low (43%). We recommend that appropriate interventions are instituted to increase contraceptive access and use especially among uneducated older rural Zambian women.
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Haynes, Naomi. "“Zambia Shall be Saved!”." Nova Religio 19, no. 1 (August 1, 2015): 5–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/nr.2015.19.1.5.

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This article explores the increasingly common argument that Pentecostal Christianity, far from being apolitical, is very politically engaged. I make two contributions to this discussion. First, my analysis provides a detailed account of how Pentecostal religious life serves as political engagement in an especially significant ethnographic context: Zambia, the only African country to make a constitutional declaration that it is a “Christian nation.” For Zambian Pentecostals, “the declaration” is a covenant with God made according to the principles of the prosperity gospel. By regularly reaffirming that covenant through prayer, believers do political work. My treatment of the prosperity gospel represents the second contribution of this article. Whereas others have argued that the prosperity gospel undermines public engagement, I show how its practices inform the political efforts of Zambian believers. I conclude by reflecting on how changes in the prosperity gospel may shape the future political actions of African Pentecostals.
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Kaarsholm, Preben. "TRANSNATIONAL ISLAM AND PUBLIC SPHERE DYNAMICS IN KWAZULU-NATAL: RETHINKING SOUTH AFRICA'S PLACE IN THE INDIAN OCEAN WORLD." Africa 81, no. 1 (January 24, 2011): 108–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0001972010000069.

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ABSTRACTIslam in KwaZulu-Natal has typically been seen as an Indian preserve and as closely linked with contestations around South African Indian identities. Against this background, dedication to Islam among Africans has appeared as exceptional, represented by groupings with particular histories of immigration from Mozambique, Malawi or Zambia. Since the 1970s, strong efforts have been made to extend the call of Islam to Africans in the province, as demonstrated in the mobilization efforts of the Islamic Propagation Centre International and the Muslim Youth Movement, and in the dawah projects of transnational Islamic NGOs like the World Assembly of Muslim Youth. Following the transition to democracy in 1994, Islam played an important role in establishing contacts between South Africans and the thousands of immigrants from other African countries – many of them with an Islamic background – who have been coming into KwaZulu-Natal. The essay discusses two different examples of Islamic practice in an African informal settlement on the outskirts of Durban, and demonstrates their different understandings of the relationship between Islam and African cultural ‘custom’. It places these differences of local theology and politics in the context of propagations of Islam as manifested in the writings of Ahmed Deedat and recent examples of pamphlet literature by African Muslims. It argues that understandings of Islam in KwaZulu-Natal as an African religion relate the area to the Indian Ocean world not only though links across the sea to South Asia, but also along the coast – bridging the gap between the Swahili continuum to the north and transnational Islam in the Cape.
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Maniatis, Antonios. "Zambian Constitutional Normativity on Religion." Open Journal for Legal Studies 3, no. 1 (June 18, 2020): 69–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.32591/coas.ojls.0301.05069m.

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Haynes, Naomi. "Taking Dominion in a Christian Nation." Pneuma 43, no. 2 (June 29, 2021): 214–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700747-bja10036.

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Abstract This article traces some of the North American theological influences on contemporary Christian nationalism in Zambia. Beginning with an overview of key tenets of Christian Reconstruction and the New Apostolic Reformation, I show how these movements have influenced the writing of some key players in Zambia’s Christian nationalist project. I also demonstrate how these authors have modified the Western ideas that have shaped their thought. This analysis responds to calls in the anthropology of Christianity for better documentation of the various forms Christian nationalism takes around the world, perhaps especially outside the West. It also challenges easy arguments about the influence of Western Christian activists on Christian politics in Africa by foregrounding the agency of local writers and theologians, even as they engage with theological ideas that originated in the West.
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Lafargue, Jérôme. "Augustinisme politique et nouvelles significations religieuses en Zambie / Political Augustinism and New Religious Meanings in Zambia." Archives de sciences sociales des religions 91, no. 1 (1995): 67–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/assr.1995.995.

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van Klinken, Adriaan. "Pentecostalism, Political Masculinity and Citizenship." Journal of Religion in Africa 46, no. 2-3 (February 27, 2016): 129–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700666-12340072.

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Africa has become a key site of masculinity politics, that is, of mobilisations and struggles where masculine gender is made a principal theme and subjected to change. Pentecostalism is widely considered to present a particular form of masculinity politics in contemporary African societies. Scholarship on African Pentecostal masculinities has mainly centred around the thesis of the domestication of men, focusing on changes in domestic spheres and in marital and intimate relations. Through an analysis of a sermon series preached by a prominent Zambian Pentecostal pastor, this article demonstrates that Pentecostal discourse on adult, middle- to upper-class masculinity is also highly concerned with men’s roles in sociopolitical spheres. It argues that in this case study the construction of a born-again masculinity is part of the broader Pentecostal political project of national redemption, which in Zambia has particular significance in light of the country constitutionally being a Christian nation. Hence the article examines how this construction of Pentecostal masculinity relates to broader notions of religious, political and gendered citizenship.
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ter Haar, Gerrie. "Religion and Healing : the Case of Milingo." Social Compass 34, no. 4 (November 1987): 475–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003776868703400410.

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Cet article traite des controverses qui ont entouré le ministère de guérison d'Emmanuel Milingo, ancien archevêque catholique de Lusaka en Zambie. Durant les années 1970, Milingo acquit une grande réputation comme guérisseur dans les cas de possession par les esprits. Son ministère de guérison rencontra une forte opposition de son Eglise et entraîna sa mutation en 1982. Plu sieurs aspects de l'« affaire Milingo» sont remarquables, mais l'Auteur se concentre sur l'attitude de la hiérarchie catholique zambienne et romaine vis-à-vis du genre de pratique de Milingo. L'article brosse un portrait de Milingo en s'attardant sur quelques expériences personnelles qui le poussèrent vers sa vocation parti culière. L'arrière-plan des conflits entraînés par Milingo est exposé et discuté. Finalement, les différents aspects de l'attitude de l'Eglise catholique en Zambie et à Rome sont analysés. L 'arti cle se base sur des observations de terrain réalisées en 1986 et fait usage de documents originaux.
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Simpson, Anthony. "PERSONHOOD AND SELF IN CATHOLIC FORMATION IN ZAMBIA." Journal of Religion in Africa 33, no. 4 (2003): 377–400. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006603322665323.

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AbstractThe article describes and analyses the recruitment and training of young Zambians in the 1990s for Catholic religious Brotherhood. The consequences of the missionary employment of Euro-American concepts of personhood and self that involve particular understandings of narrative and the use of psychological testing are explored. The author argues that Zambian understandings of personhood and of individual experience of evil and suffering are silenced in the process of religious formation. This discussion raises salient issues about training for Catholic religious or priestly life in Africa because similar techniques have been commonly employed throughout the continent.
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Kangwa, Jonathan. "Indigenous African Women’s Contribution to Christianity in NE Zambia – Case Study: Helen Nyirenda Kaunda." Feminist Theology 26, no. 1 (August 22, 2017): 34–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0966735017711871.

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This article explores the contribution of indigenous African women to the growth of Christianity in North Eastern Zambia. Using a socio-historical method, the article shows that the Presbyterian Free Church of Scotland in North Eastern Zambia evangelized mainly through literacy training and preaching. The active involvement of indigenous ministers and teacher-evangelists was indispensable in this process. The article argues that omission of the contribution of indigenous African women who were teacher-evangelists in the standard literature relating to the work of the Presbyterian Free Church of Scotland in North Eastern Zambia exposes a patriarchal bias in mission historiography. In an effort to redress this omission, the article explores and evaluates the contribution and experience of an indigenous African woman, Helen Nyirenda Kaunda. Based on relevant research the article concludes that indigenous African women were among the pioneers of mission work in North Eastern Zambia.
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Kangwa, Jonathan. "The Legacy of Peggy Hiscock: European Women’s Contribution to the Growth of Christianity in Zambia." Feminist Theology 28, no. 3 (May 2020): 316–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0966735020906940.

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The history of Christianity in Africa contains selected information reflecting patriarchal preoccupations. Historians have often downplayed the contributions of significant women, both European and indigenous African. The names of some significant women are given without details of their contribution to the growth of Christianity in Africa. This article considers the contributions of Peggy Hiscock to the growth of Christianity in Zambia. Hiscock was a White missionary who was sent to serve in Zambia by the Methodist Church in Britain. She was the first woman to have been ordained in the United Church of Zambia. Hiscock established the Order of Diaconal Ministry and founded a school for the training of deaconesses in the United Church of Zambia. This article argues that although the nineteenth- and twentieth-century missionary movement in Africa is associated with patriarchy and European imperialism, there were European women missionaries who resisted imperialism and patriarchy both in the Church and society.
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Kaunda, Chammah J. "‘Baptising Zambia’s Edgar Chagwa Lungu’: Critiquing the Utilization of the Declaration of Zambia during the Presidential Campaign of 2016." International Journal of Public Theology 13, no. 1 (May 8, 2019): 72–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15697320-12341563.

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AbstractThis article employs a public theology approach from the perspective of a decolonial theory. It analyses how the Declaration of Zambia as a Christian Nation functioned as a nationalist neo-colonial ideology during the presidential campaign of 2016. It did so in a way that was designed to legitimize President Edgar Chagwa Lungu’s political candidacy and moral authority within the Pentecostal-Charismatic religious sector. The analysis seeks to demonstrate how the Declaration and the photography of the social media presidential campaign intersected in order to represent the image of Lungu as an idea Christian President. Informed by a thematic analysis and a decolonial public theology, the article unmasks and exposes how ideology can become normalized as social practice within a particular historical context. The theological-ethnographic material within the analysis was collected during the period from January 2016 to February 2017.
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Meikusita-Lewanika, Inonge. "Evangelicals and Politics in Zambia." Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 11, no. 4 (October 1994): 21–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026537889401100406.

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34

Simpson, Anthony, and Brendan Carmody. "Education in Zambia: Catholic Perspectives." Journal of Religion in Africa 31, no. 3 (August 2001): 362. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1581615.

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Carmody, Brendan. "Zambia: multi‐faith religious education?" Journal of Beliefs & Values 27, no. 3 (December 2006): 291–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13617670601001140.

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Garvey, Brian, and Geurdina Margaretha Maria Verstaelen-Gilhuis. "From Dutch Mission Church to Reformed Church in Zambia. The Scope for African Leadership and Initiative in the History of a Zambian Mission Church." Journal of Religion in Africa 16, no. 1 (February 1986): 69. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1580981.

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37

Katulushi, Clement. "Teaching Traditional African Religions and Gender Issues in Religious Education in Zambia." British Journal of Religious Education 21, no. 2 (March 1999): 101–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0141620990210205.

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Kaunda, Mutale Mulenga. "Ukukupukula Pampoto: Cultural Construction of Silence Regarding Gender-Based Violence among Pentecostal Married Women in Zambia." Feminist Theology 30, no. 1 (September 2021): 6–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09667350211030859.

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Currently Pentecostalism has become endemic especially because of the changing landscape of Christianity in Zambia where most Christians have shifted faith allegiance from the mainline Eurocentric missionary founded churches to newer churches with charismatic leaders. The Pentecostal Church has been encouraging women’s empowerment in public spheres while subtly expecting them to submit totally and often uncritically to their husbands in private spheres. This article seeks to evaluate the ambivalence of women’s silence regarding spousal violence in Pentecostal Church in Zambia and how the silence is secretly encouraged by some older women within the church.
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Kangwa, Jonathan. "Mindolo Mission of the London Missionary Society: Origins, Development, and Initiatives for Ecumenism." Expository Times 131, no. 10 (October 15, 2019): 423–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0014524619884162.

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This paper considers the origins and development of Mindolo Mission of the London Mission Society in Zambia. First, the factors that led to the formation of the mission are analyzed. Second, the paper traces the shifts in ownership of Mindolo Mission and the negotiations to attain church union and increased ecumenism resulting in the foundation of the Church of Central Africa in Rhodesia (CCAR), United Church of Central Africa in Rhodesia (UCCAR), the formation of Mindolo Ecumenical Foundation (MEF) and the United Church of Zambia (UCZ). Third, the present paper discusses the ownership of the mission land. The paper concludes that Mindolo Mission is an offspring of the ecumenical movement and the churches who were the forerunners of the UCZ and the MEF.
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Garvey, Brian, Brendan P. Carmody, and Gerrie Ter Haar. "Conversion and Jesuit Schooling in Zambia." Journal of Religion in Africa 23, no. 4 (November 1993): 355. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1580991.

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Carmody, Brendan. "RELIGIOUS EDUCATION AND PLURALISM IN ZAMBIA." Religious Education 98, no. 2 (January 2003): 139–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00344080308289.

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Hinfelaar, Marja. "REMEMBERING BISHOP JOSEPH DUPONT (1850-1930) IN PRESENT-DAY ZAMBIA." Journal of Religion in Africa 33, no. 4 (2003): 365–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006603322665314.

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AbstractThis article deals with the reburial of Bishop Joseph Dupont in Zambia in December 2000, 88 years after he left the country. After a brief précis of the burial itself, I examine the different presentations of Bishop Dupont by scholars, White Fathers, oral literature and the Bemba Catholics in Zambia, exploring the question of who kept his memory alive and for what purposes. It is not sufficient to view Dupont's funeral as an historical oddity, but rather as a manifestation of what Ranger called 'popular Christianity'. To understand this attachment to Dupont by local Catholics, one has to go beyond the official documents and academic literature and consider the historical reconstruction on the ground. As will become clear, this is the only way to explain Bishop Dupont's current heroic status.
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Verstraelen, Frans J. "Book Review: Conversion and Jesuit Schooling in Zambia." International Bulletin of Missionary Research 17, no. 4 (October 1993): 187. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/239693939301700427.

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Thomas, Norman E. "Book Review: Protestant Mission Education in Zambia, 1880–1954." International Bulletin of Missionary Research 12, no. 1 (January 1988): 40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/239693938801200122.

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Gifford, Paul. "Bemba Christians - ‘All Good Men’: The Development of Lubwa Mission, Chinsali, Zambia 1905–1967. By At Ipenburg. (Studies in the International History of Christianity 83.) Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1992. Pp. 345. DM 98 (ISBN 3-631-45338-8); - Bembaland Church: Religion and Social Change in South Central Africa 1891–1964. By Brian Garvey. (Studies in Religion in Africa VIII.) Leiden: F. M. Brill, 1994. Pp. vii + 217. $63 (ISBN 90-04-09957-3)." Journal of African History 36, no. 3 (November 1995): 518–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021853700034666.

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46

Carmody, Brendan. "The nature and role of Christian conversion in Zambia 1." International journal for the Study of the Christian Church 7, no. 2 (May 2007): 109–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14742250701256153.

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47

Kaunda, Chammah Judex. "‘The Ngabwe Covenant’ and the Search for an African Theology of Eco-Pneumato-Relational Way of Being in Zambia." Religions 11, no. 6 (June 3, 2020): 275. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel11060275.

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This study explores the ways in which the born-again traditional leaders in Zambia are redefining neo-Pentecostal interaction with nonhuman creation. It demonstrates their attempts to rapture new religious imaginations in interstitial spaces between neo-Pentecostalism and Africa’s old spiritual systems. Since eco-spirituality is foundational to most African traditional institutions, some born again traditional leaders are forced to search for contextualized forms of neo-Pentecostalism to form new collective expressions of the spirituality of healing and reconciliation of all things. Grounded in the third space translation approach, this study analyzes ‘The Ngabwe Covenant’ which was made by the late neo-Pentecostal clergy and later traditional leader Ngabwe upon his inauguration as the traditional leader of Lamba-Lenje-and–Lima people of Central Province in Zambia. The study argues that Chief Ngabwe attempted to translate neo-Pentecostal spirituality through a traditional spiritual system of eco-relationality. In so doing, neo-Pentecostal spirituality and traditional religio-cultural heritages found new meaning and home within the hybridized (new) religious space. The study underlines that the resultant religious view which could be described as an African theology of eco-pneumato-relational way of being was envisioned as a new spiritual foundation for the Ngabwe kingdom. The article concludes that Rev. TL. Ngabwe’s theology of Spirit’s indwelling of the natural world is a critical contribution to neo-Pentecostal search for life-giving interactions between human and nonhuman creation.
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Carr, Burgess. "Book Review: From Dutch Mission Church to Reformed Church in Zambia." International Bulletin of Missionary Research 9, no. 3 (July 1985): 126–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/239693938500900312.

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Thomas, Norman E. "Book Review: Mainstream Christianity to 1980 in Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe." International Bulletin of Missionary Research 10, no. 3 (July 1986): 123–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/239693938601000311.

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50

Van Klinken, Adriaan S. "Male Headship as Male Agency: An Alternative Understanding of a ‘Patriarchal’ African Pentecostal Discourse on Masculinity." Religion and Gender 1, no. 1 (February 19, 2011): 104–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18785417-00101006.

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In some Christian circles in Africa, male headship is a defining notion of masculinity. The central question in this article is how discourses on masculinity that affirm male headship can be understood. A review of recent scholarship on masculinities and religion shows that male headship is often interpreted in terms of male dominance. However, a case study of sermons in a Zambian Pentecostal church shows that discourse on male headship can be far more complex and can even contribute to a transformation of masculinities. The main argument is that a monolithic concept of patriarchy hinders a nuanced analysis of the meaning and function of male headship in local contexts. The suggestion is that in some contexts male headship can be understood in terms of agency.
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