殖民地和后殖民时期马拉维的国家、宗教与暴力

Religions Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.3390/rel15070853
Paul Chiudza Banda
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在马拉维的殖民历史和后殖民历史中,都曾发生过与宗教有关的暴力事件,包括人身暴力和非人身暴力。这些案件导致了暴力 "实施者 "和 "无辜 "信徒的死亡、财产破坏、监狱拘留,甚至公民被迫离开该国。本文分析了两个案例研究,其中一个案例是由普罗维登斯工业传教会(Providence Industrial Mission,PIM)的一位名叫约翰-奇利姆布韦的传教士领导的私人公民实施的暴力,他在二十世纪第二个十年期间向英国殖民当局提出了挑战。第二个案例的重点是独立后的马拉维政府,由于耶和华见证会(JW)不符合世俗国家的要求,从 20 世纪 60 年代初到 90 年代初,马拉维政府对耶和华见证会成员使用了暴力。本文利用主要来自各种档案和其他已出版研究的数据,论证了使用 "宗教暴力 "并不仅仅是那些遭受压迫、排斥和边缘化的人的 "专利"。相反,像后殖民时期马拉维和非洲其他地区出现的专制政府也使用 "宗教暴力 "作为消灭 "不符合 "宗教教派和组织的工具。因此,本文对各个学术领域,包括现代非洲宗教与暴力之间的关系以及殖民地和后殖民时期非洲国家的动态和运作,都有所贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The State, Religion, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Malawi
In the histories of both colonial and postcolonial Malawi, there have been cases of religious-related violence, both in its physical and non-physical forms. Such cases have led to the deaths of the “perpetrators” of violence and ‘innocent’ believers, destruction of property, prison detentions, and even the forced removal of citizens from the country. This paper analyzes two case studies, one in which private citizens perpetrated the violence, led by a preacher called John Chilembwe, of the Providence Industrial Mission (PIM), challenging British colonial authorities during the second decade of the twentieth century. In the second case, the focus is on the independent Malawi government, which used violence against members of the Jehovah’s Witness (JW) religious sect from the early 1960s to the early 1990s, owing to the Witnesses’ disassociation from the demands of the secular state. Using data primarily drawn from various archives and other published studies, this paper argues that the use of ‘religious-based violence’ is not just a domain ‘reserved’ for those experiencing oppression, exclusion, and marginalization. Rather, authoritarian governments, like the one that emerged in postcolonial Malawi and other parts of Africa, also resorted to using ‘religious-based violence’ to serve as a tool for eliminating ‘non-conforming’ religious sects and organizations. In doing so, this paper contributes to the various fields of scholarship, including the relationship between religion and violence in modern Africa and the dynamics and operations of the state in both colonial and postcolonial Africa.
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