Under the Southern Cross: Or, a Woman's Life Work for AfricaThe special work to which I had been appointed at Fair View was the school work; although my instructions given by Superintendent Roberts on the eve of my departure for Africa gave full liberty to evangelize as well as to teach. My manual read something like this: "Do not be satisfied to be merely a school teacher. Be an evangelist. Go out to the kraals, preaching as you go. Make the salvation of souls your one and only business." -from "Chapter XIII: My School" The missionary work of Westerners in Africa is long and storied-here's another tale of the long-term attempts to convert a continent. Privately published, this is one woman's account of her Christian work in Zulu country, from her childhood-she was born in 1863-on farms in Iowa and Kansas, where she had a youthful brush with death that led to her conversion to an active Christianity, to her return home after long years doing the Lord's work. The time in between is fraught with culture shock: her difficulties in learning the Zulu language, her disdain for Zulu tradition and mythology, even a particular scorn for the food she found unpalatable. Stolid and unbending, this is a curious document of a less enlightened time, a firsthand look at the mindset of a bygone time. |
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Contents
20 | |
25 | |
Getting at My Life Work | 30 |
The Voyage and Landing | 39 |
Our African Neighbors | 64 |
NatalThe Land | 79 |
HistoricalChalka | 89 |
Customs Superstitions and Beliefs | 99 |
Again at Work | 280 |
Progressing Slowly | 288 |
Itinerating | 294 |
A Study of Inhambane Natives | 300 |
A Further Study of Inhambane Natives | 316 |
Day by Day | 325 |
Life and Death | 337 |
Resignation | 348 |
Pouring on Cold Water | 123 |
Varied Experiences | 132 |
My School | 149 |
Two Weddings | 168 |
Our Work at Bethany | 176 |
Incidentals | 186 |
Further Developments | 199 |
A Zulu Wedding | 217 |
Summary of One Years Work at Bethany | 229 |
Clouds and Sunshine | 241 |
Chapter Pagk XXI A Trip to Zululand | 250 |
Strange Providences | 264 |
Spying Out the Land and Settling | 271 |
In the Highways and Hedges | 353 |
Thinning Out the Ranks | 370 |
Looking Toward Home | 377 |
My Final Tour | 385 |
XXXVf Man Proposes God Disposes | 397 |
Sweeping Through the Pates | 401 |
Farewell to Inhambane | 408 |
Retrospective and Prospective | 413 |
Haviland Memorial Mission | 425 |
Readjustment | 433 |
XLU Olivet Mission | 446 |
Other editions - View all
Under the Southern Cross: Or, a Woman's Life Work for Africa Emma Hillmon Haviland No preview available - 1928 |
Common terms and phrases
able Africa Agnew appeared asked believe Board boys Brother brought called carry cattle CHAPTER chief Christian church close clothes coming dance dark death door dress drink Durban early English entirely Fair father feel fever field friends girls give given ground hand Haviland head heard heart heathen hold hope Inhambane interest Jesus kraal labor land language leave letter living look Lord means meeting miles mission missionary months morning Natal natives never night once passed perhaps person pray prayer present reached rest seemed seen sent short Sister soon soul spirit station Sunday sure things took usually View waiting walk weeks wife women young Zulu
Popular passages
Page 23 - For unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his sake ; 30 Having the same conflict "which ye saw in me, and now hear to be in me.