Theologian Harvey Kwiyani named “Nothing for us without us” in a recent newsletter as the ‘first rule of mission in the twenty-first century’. As an African, he exhorts those of us from the West to welcome the leadership and vision of Africans when we seek to join in God’s work in Africa.
In July I attended the Sudan/South Sudan Mission Network, a collaboration of congregations, presbyteries, and other groups in the U.S. who are involved in Sudan and South Sudan through relationships with churches and people there. Most of the Americans present have made multiple visits over 10 or 20 years, and they have also welcomed into their homes the colleagues from Sudan and South Sudan. I appreciate the deep relationships and mutual respect built up over many years. Several South Sudanese Americans have joined and become more active in recent years, and their bi-cultural perspective helps to remind those of us who are European-Americans of some of the local realities of cultural issues we might be overlooking. The network makes the effort to hear directly from South Sudanese in pursuit of living by that principle – “nothing for us without us.”
This year I introduced the mission network members to one session of the Healing Hearts Transforming Nations workshop. We broke up into ethno-cultural groups and looked at the losses that each group has experienced. It was a good opportunity for us as European descent Americans to identify the losses our communities have experienced, like loss of our cultural roots and the loss of respect for one another. We also discussed some of the blind spots and deceptions which have resulted from these losses, like our perceived cultural superiority and extreme individualism. Taking time to name and discuss some of those losses and weaknesses reminded us how much we can benefit from the influences of people outside our culture, like our Sudanese and South Sudanese friends.
One group at the mission network discussing their losses
At the mission network meeting in 2019 with
some of the South Sudanese and Sudanese members
some of the South Sudanese and Sudanese members
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