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BMGN-LCHR (Bijdragen en Mededelingen van de Geschiedenis der Nederlanden - Low Countries Historical Review)

Publication date: 2017-01-01
Volume: 132 Pages: 62 - 82
Publisher: Koninklijk Nederlands Historisch Genootschap

Author:

Au, Sokhieng

Keywords:

colonial medicine, missionary medicine, Belgian Congo, Arts & Humanities, History, COLONIAL MEDICINE, HISTORY, 19TH-CENTURY, PROFESSION, POLITICS, LEPROSY, AFRICA, HEALTH, CHURCH, INDIA, 2103 Historical Studies, 4303 Historical studies

Abstract:

The history of religious missions and the provisioning of western medical care in the region that was known as the Congo Free State and later the Belgian Congo reveals the complicated dynamics between competing religious missions vis à vis the Belgian colonial state. This essay highlights divisions between identities and purposes of different religious groups in medical care provisioning, focusing on the divide between the Catholic and Protestant churches. Because most Protestant missions in the Congo were American or British, the medical care provided by the Protestant church was outside of, and sometimes at odds with, the Belgian colonial state until the 1920s. In contrast, the Catholic Church served in an auxiliary role in the colonial state’s medical infrastructure. This was not an ideal situation, leading Catholic leaders to attempt to rework the church’s role in medical provisioning. Ultimately, mission, medicine, and empire were not always comfortable bedfellows.