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CHRISTIAN CONVERSION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   157879


Fractured christianity amongst the tangsa in northeast india—bible language politics and the charm of ecstatic experiences / Barkataki-Ruscheweyh, Meenaxi   Journal Article
Meenaxi Barkataki-Ruscheweyh Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper examines the proliferation of Christian denominations among the small Tangsa community in Northeast India. While resentment over the language chosen by the Baptist Church for the official Tangsa Bible triggered the initial fissures, the recent arrival of Pentecostal and charismatic churches has brought about further divisions. These divisions have not helped the cause of pan-Tangsa unity. However, in the everyday lives of most Tangsa, it is the Christian/non-Christian divide that is more relevant. Hence, the Tangsa situation is different from that of the neighbouring Mizo and Naga communities, in which Christianity has become a defining part of their identities.
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2
ID:   132969


Putting Indian Christianities into context: biographies of Christian conversion in a leprosy colony / Staples, James   Journal Article
Staples, James Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Gandhian and Hindutva-inspired discourses around conversions to Christianity in India over-simplify the historical nexus of relations between missionaries, converts and the colonial state. Challenging the view that conversions were ever only about material gain, this paper draws on long-term ethnographic fieldwork with leprosy-affected people in South India to consider the role that conversion has also played in establishing alternative, often positively construed, identities for those who came to live in leprosy colonies from the mid twentieth century onwards. The paper draws out the distinctive values associated with a Christian identity in India, exploring local Christianities as sets of practices through which, for example, a positive sense of belonging might be established for those otherwise excluded, rather than being centred upon personal faith and theology per se. Biographical accounts are drawn upon to document and analyse some of the on-the-ground realities, and the different implications-depending on one's wider social positioning-of converting from Hinduism to Christianity in South India.
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