This article argues that in Africa, the nature and advent of racism has to be traced back to the earliest encounters between Africans and Europeans, including the first seven centuries but especially during the slavery and colonial eras. Religion (notably Islam and Christianity), trade, education, culture, and “science” were important incubators and justifiers of racism, in earlier as well as recent times. The paper concludes by proposing some ways in which African theology can stay agile and keep pace with the resilient and adaptive forms of racism in contemporary Africa.https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/175866232022-01-21hj2021Science of Religion and Missiolog
The issue of xenophobia is fast becoming a negative uprising on the African continent with the recen...
Barely seventeen years into the twenty-first century, our world continues to be plagued by endless w...
In this article the author shall argue that before Namibian independence in 1990, Christianity was u...
The thrust of this paper is driven by the current reactions of Pentecostal Christians to the African...
Racism is again a burning issue in our country. One may define racism as the conviction that not all...
There is so much alienation, pain and suffering in our today�s world. In this vein, African Christi...
In this article, the author challenges the popular public conception that Christianity in Africa is ...
Looking at most African countries, one realises that the social imaginaries which make us who we are...
The contact between African Traditional Religion (ATR) and Christianity is inextricably linked to Eu...
The African heritage and identity have been intensely religious. Africans carry along their religio-...
Christian missionaries were among the first Europeans to move into Africa. They came on a mission to...
This study explores black African migrants' experience of racism in Berlin, today. Its vantage point...
Religion constitutes an inextricable part of African society. As such, political and socio-economic...
The purpose of this investigation is to define the religious experience of Africa over the span of p...
Our history in South Africa has shown that we are largely segregated and unequal, as race continues ...
The issue of xenophobia is fast becoming a negative uprising on the African continent with the recen...
Barely seventeen years into the twenty-first century, our world continues to be plagued by endless w...
In this article the author shall argue that before Namibian independence in 1990, Christianity was u...
The thrust of this paper is driven by the current reactions of Pentecostal Christians to the African...
Racism is again a burning issue in our country. One may define racism as the conviction that not all...
There is so much alienation, pain and suffering in our today�s world. In this vein, African Christi...
In this article, the author challenges the popular public conception that Christianity in Africa is ...
Looking at most African countries, one realises that the social imaginaries which make us who we are...
The contact between African Traditional Religion (ATR) and Christianity is inextricably linked to Eu...
The African heritage and identity have been intensely religious. Africans carry along their religio-...
Christian missionaries were among the first Europeans to move into Africa. They came on a mission to...
This study explores black African migrants' experience of racism in Berlin, today. Its vantage point...
Religion constitutes an inextricable part of African society. As such, political and socio-economic...
The purpose of this investigation is to define the religious experience of Africa over the span of p...
Our history in South Africa has shown that we are largely segregated and unequal, as race continues ...
The issue of xenophobia is fast becoming a negative uprising on the African continent with the recen...
Barely seventeen years into the twenty-first century, our world continues to be plagued by endless w...
In this article the author shall argue that before Namibian independence in 1990, Christianity was u...