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2015 Electronic International Interdisciplinary Research Journal ( EIIRJ ) REVIEWED INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL VOL IV Issues I Chief-Editor Mr.Ubale Amol Baban www.aarhat.com 25/2/2015

Page8 A SURVEY OF LITERATURE ON CHRISTIAN MEDICAL MISSIONS IN MEGHALAYA Research paper in History Banwan Shaphrang Lyngdoh, Assistant professor, Department of History, St.Anthony s College, Shillong, Meghalaya,India. In Christian mission history studies, health or medical work is generally treated as a part of missionary activity and not a distinct activity on its own. As such, not too many historical works dealing exclusively with Christian medical missions are available. Godfrey E. Phillips 1 and Francis M. DuBose 2 lay down the theological basis and Biblical foundation of Christian missions in general and explain the missionary motive and attitude. Christian missionary work is essentially spreading the Gospel across different parts of the world. While DuBose s work makes no specific reference to medical missions, Philips speaks of education and medical mission as second line activities which have no justification unless they support the first line, which is evangelism and church building. Some Christian scholars 3 however, try to show that health and healing are an integral part of the gospel, are present throughout the Bible and have always been a concern of the Church. The lectures published in a collection 4 by the Edinburgh Medical Mission Society, the first established Christian medical mission organisation, also deal with the concept of health mission and the duty of the Christian health missionary. The idea of providing health care being a missionary duty is also reflected in Gillian Paterson s work 5 on the CMC Hospital, Vellore. The above are works representing the type that focuses on the motive of the missionary in

Page9 general and the medical missionary in particular. The study of Christian health missions also requires a look at the history of Christian missions in general. The focus of these works is on missionary activities which may not at all include medical work. Many works on Christian mission history contain nothing on medical missions. Two well-known works by J. Herbert Kane on mission history viz. A Global View of Christian Missions from Pentecost to the Present 6 and A Concise History of the Christian World Mission: A Panoramic View of Missions from Pentecost to the Present 7 as well as A History of Christian Missions 8 by Stephen Neill make no reference to medical missions. The work of David Jenks contains references to missionary social service in Africa, the Far East, India, Iran and the Arab countries. However, education was the social service more concentrated upon than medical work. 9 In the Indian context too, there are works on medical missions which make scanty or no reference at all to medical missions. S. Manickam 10, George Kottupalil 11 and P.T. George 12 make scanty references to medical missions in their rather elaborate works on mission history. The absence of focus on medical mission is also seen in mission history works dealing with North East India. A work on the history of the Catholic Church in North East India edited by Sebastian Karotemprel 13 contains no reference at all to medical missions. Stray references to medical work by missionaries are found in works by George Maliekal 14 and Christopher Becker 15. Nalini Natarajan 16 dwells at length on the impact of missionary work on different aspects of Khasi society but made only incidental references to missionary medical work. The first volume of Milton S. Sangma s work on Baptist missionaries 17 in the region refers to evangelistic work among Kalazar patients treated in Government hospitals by Baptist missionaries but there is no reference to medical aid. The absence or near absence of the medical work element in many works on Christian mission history is indicative of the fact that health care was not considered an evangelical tool by some missionaries, the early missionaries in particular. There are a good number of works on Mission history making specific references to medical missions. One of the earliest works referring to medical missions is that of Charles Henry Robinson 18 published in 1915. It describes medical missions as one method by which missionaries have sought to appeal to non-christian races. It talks of medical work in China, India, Korea, other parts of Asia as well as Africa. Phillip Eichman 19 briefly outlines the development of Christian medical missions in the world till the 1970s. C.B. Firth 20, in his work

Page10 on the history of the Church in India, briefly discusses the works of Christian missionaries in India on the medical front. Otto Wack 21, writing on the work of German missionaries in southern Orissa in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries makes references to the missionaries contribution to education, development of literature and the printing press as well as medical aid. References to the rendering of educational and medical services by missionaries are found in the early works of the Welsh Presbyterian missionaries 22, including one in Khasi. 23 A comparatively elaborate treatment of health missions is seen in the works of Frederick S. Downs 24 and O.L. Snaitang 25 as well as in the second volume of Milton S. Sangma s work on the American Baptist mission. 26 The inclusion of health care in works on missions represents a step forward in medical mission studies but the lack of detail and analysis reveals a huge lacuna. The analytical component is discernable in Phyllis L. Garlick 27 who shows how medical work, initially not considered as part of missionary activity, came to be recognized an evangelistic agency by the end of the nineteenth century. Garlick s work is one among the few works that deal entirely with medical mission history. David Hardiman makes an analysis of medical missions in the world, the recognition of their importance in evangelism in the late nineteenth century, their growth till the 1960s and their wane post-1970. Walter Bruchhausen sought to explain the specific relationship between the mission hospitals and different other agents of health care in South East Tanzania in the last century. Hardiman s and Bruchhausen s works are part of a published collection edited by Mark Harrison et. al. 28 Another work, edited by Hardiman 29, studies medical missions exclusively, though not from the historical perspective. Echoing Garlick and Hardiman, Rosemary Fitzgerald 30 and Raj Sekhar Basu 31 observe that in India the Christian missionaries realized the importance of health care to evangelisation by the end of the nineteenth century. Fitzgerald also makes an interesting observation that missionary medicine gained popularity in India in due course of time but at the same time, Indian patients largely rejected its religious component. 32 Though medical missionary work involved women, there is a lack of separate treatment of their contribution. Basu 33 and Amena N. Passah 34 have made significant contributions by highlighting the role of women medical missionaries in their respective works. In the context of North east India, specific works of analytical nature on medical mission history are lacking. Apart from Amena N. Passah, Dr. H. Ghonglah has written a paper The

Page11 Church and Health Care in North East India published in Impact of Christianity on North East India. 35 It deals in part with history of medical missions but dwelled more on other aspects of health care. Published books apart, a few papers on medical missions have been published in conference proceedings and journals. These include work on the Baptist medical mission in the region by David R. Syiemlieh 36 and Wati Imchen 37 and on the Welsh Presbyterian medical mission by Amena N. Passah. 38 An article by a scholar focuses on the impact of medical work by the Welsh Presbyterian missionaries on the traditional beliefs and practices of the Khasis. 39 The unpublished theses of Vihuli Sema 40 and Amena N. Passah 41, dealing with the American Baptist Mission in Nagaland and the Welsh Presbyterian Mission in the Khasi-Jaintia hills respectively, contain sections on missionary contribution to society including the field of health care. In this review, we may also include biographical works related to medical missions. One may get an insight into the early stages of Welsh medical missionary work in the Khasi-Jaintia hills from a work on the life of Dr. Griffith Griffiths who established a dispensary at Mawphlang in 1878. 42 The biography of Dr. R.A. Hughes 43 is intrinsically linked to the history of the Welsh Mission Hospital now known as Dr. H. Gordon Roberts Hospital. Biographical works apart, the creative non-fiction work of Nigel Jenkins, Gwalia in Khasia 44, which dwells at length on the work of the Welsh Presbyterian missionary Thomas Jones and his colleagues, also throw light on Welsh missionary activity in the Khasi-Jaintia hills, medical service included. From the above review of available literature, it is clear that though the study of Christian medical missions is an explored area, detailed research on the history of Christian medical missions in Meghalaya is yet to be undertaken and therefore this is a gap area. References: Phillips, Godfrey E. (1939). The Gospel in the World: A Re-Statement of Missionary Principles. London: Duckworth. DuBose, Francis M. (1979). The Classics of Christian Missions. Nashville: Broadman Press. Allen, E. Antony et.al (2003). Health, Healing and Transformation: Biblical Reflections on the Church in Ministries of healing and Wholeness. Chennai: World Vision International.

Page12 Lectures on Medical Missions: Delivered at the Instance of the Edinburgh Medical Missionary Society (2013). Edinburgh: EMMS Publication. Paterson, Gillian (1993). Whose Ministry?: A Ministry of Health Care for the year 2000. Geneva: WCC Publications. Kane, J. Herbert (1971). A Global View of Christian Missions from Pentecost to the Present. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House. Kane, J. Herbert (1978). A Concise History of the Christian World Mission: A Panoramic View of Missions from Pentecost to the Present. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House. Neill, Stephen (1991). A History of Christian Missions, London: Penguin Books. Jenks, David (1926). A Study of World Evangelisation. London: Student Christian Movement. Manickam, S. (1988). The History of the Indian Missionary Society., Tirunelveli: Indian Missionary Society. Kottupalil, George (1988). History of the Catholic Missions in Central Bengal 1855-1886, Shillong: Vendrame Institute. George, P.T. (2013). Missionary Pragmatism: No People to God s People: A Study of Henry Baker Jr. s Work Among the Malayarayans. Delhi: ISPCK. Karotemprel, Sebastian (1993). The Catholic Church in Northeast India 1890-1990 (A Multidimensional Study). Shillong: Vendrame Institute. Maliekal, George (2005). History of the Catholic Church among the Khasis. Shillong: DBCIC Publications. Becker, Christopher (1980). History of the Catholic Missions in North East India, 1890-1915. Shillong: Vendrame Institute. Natarajan, Nalini (1977). The Missionary among the Khasis. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd. Sangma, Milton S. (1987). History of the American Baptist Mission in North East India (1836-1950) Vol. I. Delhi: Mittal Publications. Robinson, Charles Henry (1915). The History of Christian Missions. Edinburgh: T. and T. Clark. Eichman, Phillip. Medical Missions among the Churches of Christ. http://bible.ovu.edu/missions/medical/medbook2.htm

Page13 Firth, C.B. (2003). An Introduction to Indian Church History. Delhi: ISPCK. Wack, Otto (1997). Church and Mission in India: The History of the Jeypore Church and the Breklum Mission (1876-1914). Delhi: ISPCK. Morris, John Hughes (1990). The Story of Our Foreign Mission (Presbyterian Church of Wales). Aizawl, Mizoram: Synod Publication Board. Jones, G. Angell (1966). Ka History jong ka Balang (1841-1966), Mawkhar, Shillong: KJP Synod Church House. Downs, Frederick S. (1982). History of Christianity in India Vol. V Part 5: North East India in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Bangalore: The Church History Association of India. Snaitang, O.L. (1993). Christianity and Social Change in Northeast India. Calcutta: Firma KLM Private Limited. Sangma, Milton S. (1992). History of the American Baptist Mission in North East India (1836-1950) Vol. II. Delhi: Mittal Publications. Garlick, Phyllis L. (1943). The Wholeness of Man: A Study in the History of Healing. London: The Highway Press. Harrison, Mark et. al (2009). From Western Medicine to Global Medicine: the Hospital beyond the West. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan. Hardiman, David (ed.) (2006). Healing Bodies, Saving Souls: Medical Missions in Asia and Africa. New York: Rodopi. Fitzgerald, Rosemary (2001). Clinical Christianity : The Emergence of Medical Work as a Missionary Strategy in Colonial India, 1800-1914. Biswamoy Pati and Mark Harrison (eds), Health, Medicine and Empire: Perspectives on Colonial India. New Delhi: Orient Longman Limited. Basu, Raj Sekhar (2001). Medical Missionaries at Work: The Canadian Baptist Missionaries in the Telegu Country, 1870-1952. Deepak Kumar (ed), Disease and Medicine in India: A Historical Review. New Delhi: Tulika Books. Fitzgerald, Rosemary (2001). Clinical Christianity : The Emergence of Medical Work as a Missionary Strategy in Colonial India, 1800-1914 (p.129). Biswamoy Pati and Mark Harrison (eds), Health, Medicine and Empire: Perspectives on Colonial India. New Delhi: Orient Longman Limited.

Page14 Basu, Raj Sekhar (2001). Medical Missionaries at Work: The Canadian Baptist Missionaries in the Telegu Country, 1870-1952 (pp.185-186). Deepak Kumar (ed), Disease and Medicine in India: A Historical Review. New Delhi: Tulika Books. Passah, Amena N. (2009). Christian Missions in the Khasi-Jaintia Hills: Health Care and Impact on the Society. T.B. Subba et.al (eds.), Christianity and Change in North East India. New Delhi: Concept Publishing Company. Imchen, Wati (2001). The Baptist Medical Mission in Nagaland. Proceedings of North East India History Association. Twenty Second Session. Passah, Amena N. (2001). The Welsh Presbyterian Church and health Care in the Khasi-Jaintia Hills (1841-1969). Proceedings of North East India History Association. Nineteenth Session. Nongbri, B.L. (2014). Western Health Care and Traditional Worldview: A Study of the Cultural Encounter between the Welsh Presbyterian Medical Mission and the Khasi Traditional Culture. Church History Association of India. 16 th Triennial Conference. Sema, Vihuli (2010). The American Baptist Mission and the Nagas. Unpublished Ph. D. Thesis, Department of History, North Eastern Hill University. Passah, Amena N. (2005). The Work of the Welsh Presbyterian Mission in the Khasi-Jaintia Hills. Unpublished Ph. D. Thesis, Department of History, North Eastern Hill University. Griffiths, Basil (2004). The Life and Work of the First Welsh Medical Missionary in the Khasi Hills. The NEHU Journal Volume II, Number 2. Khongwir, L. (2010). Noble Deeds in Silence. Guwahati: DVS Publishers. Jenkins, Nigel (1995). Gwalia in Khasia. Llandysul, Dyfed (Wales, UK): Gomer Press. Copyrights @ Dr Ashok D. Wagh This is an open access reviewed article distributed under the creative common attribution license which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provide the original work is cited.