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Reaching the unreached Sudan Belt : Guinness, Kumm and the Sudan-Pioneer-Mission

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dc.contributor.advisor Fiedler, Klaus, Dr.
dc.contributor.advisor Reimer, J.
dc.contributor.author Sauer, Christof, 1963-
dc.date.accessioned 2009-08-25T10:47:38Z
dc.date.available 2009-08-25T10:47:38Z
dc.date.issued 2001-11
dc.identifier.citation Sauer, Christof, 1963- (2001) Reaching the unreached Sudan Belt : Guinness, Kumm and the Sudan-Pioneer-Mission, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/891> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/891
dc.description.abstract This missiological project seeks to study the role of the Guinnesses and Kumms in reaching the Sudan Belt, particularly through the Sudan-Pionier-Mission (SPM) founded in 1900. The term Sudan Belt referred to Africa between Senegal and Ethiopia, at that period one of the largest areas unreached by Christian missionaries. Grattan Guinness (1835-1910) at that time was the most influential promoter of faith missions for the Sudan. The only initiative based in Germany was the SPM, founded by Guinness, his daughter Lucy (1865-1906), and her German husband Karl Kumm (1874-1930). Kumm has undeservedly been forgotten, and his early biography as a missionary and explorer in the deserts of Egypt is here brought to light again. The early SPM had to struggle against opposition in Germany. Faith missions were considered unnecessary, and missions to Muslims untimely by influential representatives of classical missions. The SPM was seeking to reach the Sudan Belt via the Nile from Aswan. The most promising figure for this venture was the Nubian Samuel Ali Hiseen (1863-1927), who accomplished a scripture colportage tour through Nubia. Unfortunately, he was disregarded by the first German missionary, Johannes Kupfemagel (1866-1937). When the SPM failed to reach the Sudan Belt due to political restrictions, Kumm and the SPM board were divided in their strategies. Kumm planned to pursue a new route via the Niger River, seeking support in Great Britain rather independently. The SPM, holding on to Aswan, dismissed Kumm, and began to decline until it made a new start in 1905, but for a long time remained a local mission work in Upper Egypt. The Sudan United Mission however, founded by the Kumms in 1904, did indeed reach the Sudan Belt. An analysis of the SPM reveals its strengths and weaknesses. The SPM grew out of the Holiness movement and shared the urgency, which made faith missions successful, but also was the SPM's weakness, as it suffered from ill-preparedness. The SPM innovatively gathered together single women from the nobility in a community of service for missions under its chairman, Pastor Theodor Ziemendorff (1837-:1912). en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Missiology en
dc.subject Mission history--Protestant en
dc.subject Interdenominational faith missions en
dc.subject Sudan-Pionier-Mission en
dc.subject Sudan-United-Mission en
dc.subject Africa en
dc.subject Sudan Belt en
dc.subject Egypt en
dc.subject Aswan en
dc.subject Nubia en
dc.subject Germany en
dc.subject Hessen-Nassau en
dc.subject Wiesbaden en
dc.subject Osterode am Harz en
dc.subject Great Britain en
dc.subject United States of America en
dc.subject Missionary biography en
dc.subject Henry Grattan Guinness en
dc.subject Lucy E. Guinness en
dc.subject H. Karl W. Kumm en
dc.subject Theodor Ziemendorff en
dc.subject Samuel Ali Hiseen en
dc.subject Gustav Warneck en
dc.subject Missionary objectives en
dc.subject Female missionaries en
dc.subject Indigenous missionary workers en
dc.subject Missionary methods en
dc.subject Missionary cooperation en
dc.subject Missionary conflicts en
dc.subject Mission among muslims en
dc.subject.lcsh Missions -- Theory
dc.subject.lcsh Interdenominational cooperation -- Sudan (Region)
dc.subject.lcsh Women missionaries -- Sudan (Region)
dc.subject.lcsh Missions -- Sudan (Region)
dc.title Reaching the unreached Sudan Belt : Guinness, Kumm and the Sudan-Pioneer-Mission en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology
dc.description.degree D.Th. (Missiology)


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