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Title: White Christ, Black Cross
Sub-title: The Emergence of a Black Church
By (author): Noel Loos
ISBN10-13: 0855755539 : 9780855755539
Illustrations: b/w photos
Format: Paperback
Size: 155x230mm
Pages: 216
Weight: .434 Kg.
Published: Aboriginal Studies Press (AUS) - October   2007
List Price: 24.99 Pounds Sterling
Availability: In Stock   Qty Available: 1
Subjects: Anglican & Episcopalian Churches, Church of Englan : Christian mission & evangelism : Indigenous peoples : Australia
Arthur Malcolm, a stocky Aboriginal man in a maroon Fairmont, was in tears as the cavalcade drove towards Yarrabah Aboriginal community. It was October 1985 and the Yarrabah people were cheering him as he returned to the community as their new bishop, the first Aboriginal bishop in the Anglican Church. In "White Christ, Black Cross" Noel Loos interweaves his own more than twenty years' personal experience with Yarrabah and other Queensland Aboriginal communities along with the voices of Aboriginal people, missionaries, and those who sat in the pews and on subcommittees and Boards in the cities, removed from the reality of the missions. Loos embeds the historical influences and impacts of the missions in shaping Christianity in Aboriginal Australia in the reality of frontier violence, government control, segregation and neglect. Aboriginal people on the missions responded to white Christianity as part of their enforced cultural change. As control diminished, Aboriginal people responded more overtly and autonomously: some regarding Christianity as irrelevant, others adopting it in culturally satisfying ways. Through the Australian Board of Missions, the Church of England sought to convert Aboriginal people into a Europeanised compliant sub-caste, with the separation of children from their families the first step. However, increasingly the Church found itself embroiled in emerging broader social issues and changing government policies. Loos believes its support of Ernest Gribble's exposure of the 1926 Forrest River massacres indirectly set off the current 'history wars'. Nowadays, Yarrabah, one of the old mission communities, has become a centre of Christian revival, expressing an Aboriginal understanding and spirituality.
Table of Contents:
The Triumph of the Mynah Bird; Agents of the Aboriginal Holocaust; In the Beginning: The Australian Board of Missions, the Anglican Church and the Aborigines 1850-1900; The Golden Age of Missions 1900-1950 ; An Expanding Perspective 1900-1950; Of Massacres, Missionaries, Myths and History Wars; The End of An Era; A Black Church: 'Let My People Go'; A New Beginning: A vision from Yarrabah; Index.
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