original article (with pictures):
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/magazine/29missionaries.html The mission church is scarcely more than a shed with open sides.
Rusty beams support a roof of corrugated metal, and a wooden lectern,
unadorned, serves as the pulpit. No cross rises from the roof or hangs
behind the lectern on the blue-painted cement wall; there is no cross
anywhere. The house of worship is almost nothing. But it is too much
for the missionary Rick Maples. "I want this to be the last church," he
said. "This should be the last church built in this section of the
valley."
With needles nearly bone white, scrub borders the patch of cleared
ground - of coarse sand - that surrounds the church. Cactuses,
shoulder-high, grow beside spindly bushes throughout the valley, and
the vines and stunted trees are studded with thorns. It is a place,
this desiccated land in northern Kenya, where living requires severe
tenacity. But it is also a valley of abundance. The country's famous
game parks are far to the south, yet here miniature antelope leap over
the scrub and monkeys idle at the edge of the Mapleses' backyard. A
pair of leopards pranced across the yard one evening last year. At the
top of the sporadic acacia trees, whose upper branches form a broad,
flat, wispy canopy that looks too delicate to support anything heavier
than birds, families of baboons move about, feeding on tiny buds. They
seem to float on the flimsy treetops.
Rick, his wife, Carrie, and their two
daughters, Meghan and Stephanie, moved to this mission outpost in
September 2004. Once, their home was in Danville, Calif., an affluent
suburb about 30 miles outside San Francisco. Their house "cost a pile,"
Rick told me, remembering what he termed "my other life," and Carrie
recalled the sunken Jacuzzi and the high ceilings and the curved
staircase that they draped with garlands at Christmastime. Rick, who is
43 and whose thick, gray crew cut and slightly round cheeks give him an
air of constant buoyancy, was a salesman for a company that marketed
combustion engines. Carrie, three years younger, with an angular face
and a quieter voice that suggest a different, more private kind of
resilience, was a nurse who spent most of her career working with
pediatric cancer patients. "We were really happy with our life," he
said. "We saw about 25 years ahead, and we were happy with what we saw."
We were talking at the dining table in their mission house, down the
path from the church. Both house and church were built by the American
missionaries whom the Mapleses have replaced. Shabby but serviceable,
the small cinder-block house has running water from a tank that is
mounted - along with the church bell - on a metal tower in the front
yard. The refrigerator operates on kerosene. In California, the house
might belong in a slum; here it is luxurious. It sits just outside
Kurungu, a town in name only, near the edge of the desert, much closer
to the Ethiopian border than to Kenya's capital, Nairobi, which is a
12-to-14-hour drive away, mostly on dirt roads. Kurungu's three or four
shops, dim stalls of dusty shelves, rarely sell more than lard and tea
leaves, sugar and salt.
The local tribe, the Samburu, are seminomadic herders of cattle and
camels and goats. Scattered throughout the valley and surrounding
mountains, they live in manyattas, settlements of huts, about four feet
tall at the high points of their sloping roofs, covered in thatch and
animal skins. A good portion of the Samburu diet - perhaps most of it -
consists of milk and cow's blood, blood drained by cinching a rope
tourniquet around the base of the cow's neck, then shooting an arrow
into the side of the neck (without killing the animal) and letting the
dark liquid spurt into a wooden tankard.
Much of Africa, and certainly much of Kenya, one of the continent's
most Westernized countries, hold a mix of the modern and the timeless.
But around Kurungu, the modern seems to have barely penetrated. Their
wooden bells clacking softly in the still air, the herds graze, tended
by the Samburu, whose bodies are draped in wraps of brilliant cloth,
whose necks and foreheads are resplendent in beads and burnished metal,
whose hair is dyed with red ocher.
To reach the Maples family, I'd flown from Nairobi in a plane hardly
bigger than a toy; the pilot, Frank Toews, told me how, as a teenager
outside Toronto, he dreamed of flying commercial planes but soon
realized that the Lord desired something different. He's now one of 20
pilots in the air wing of the Africa Inland Mission, the century-old,
primarily American organization, evangelical and nondenominational,
that is known as AIM and that has sent Rick and Carrie to work among
the Samburu. The hills below us turned from lush to tan, their jagged
contours exposed. Soon Frank pointed out the dirt airstrip next to the
Mapleses' house. The plane landed and took off again, and for about a
week, other than the Mapleses' Land Rover, that was it for comings and
goings of mechanical transport around Kurungu - except for one morning,
when another Land Rover jounced along the sand thoroughfare that runs
past the airstrip and through the valley and beyond. It carried
evangelists from somewhere to the south; they were headed off into the
desert to translate the Bible into the language of another tribe.
"For us, this is home," Rick said confidently. Carrie agreed that
this was where they belonged, by virtue of their calling to convert the
Samburu. "How do they know the truth," she paraphrased from the book of
Romans, "unless they are told the truth?" In the long run, Rick said,
he had his sights set not only on the area around Kurungu but
throughout the territory of the tribe.
Rick and Carrie's daughters didn't seem so sure that this was where
they were meant to be. Stephanie, their ash-blond 4-year-old, started
to cry right after Meghan said grace at dinner on my first night with
the Mapleses a few months ago. "I miss my friends," Stephanie said
faintly, having just spent a rare weekend with the kids of a missionary
family two hours' drive away. Her head still bowed following grace, her
crying was all but tearless, and her voice remained almost mute as she
reiterated her loneliness - she came as close as a 4-year-old in a
floral print shirt could to being a Stoic. She'd been scared a lot
lately too, Carrie said, explaining Stephanie's weeping. The family's
dog, Cooper, an irrepressible mutt, had been attacked and nearly
blinded by a spitting cobra on the Mapleses' back porch. And Stephanie
had been hearing about the two lions that had, over the past month,
killed several donkeys and a camel close by. The pair of Samburu guards
who keep watch over the house recently chased the lions from the low
fence of the family's yard.
Meghan, who is 12 and home-schooled, seemed even less sure than her
little sister that Kurungu was where she should be. It wasn't that
either girl lacked an intrepid spirit. Meghan proved her ability to
adapt eight years earlier, when the Mapleses took on their first
mission posting, a two-year assignment that they extended into six.
That station, too, was in rural Kenya, near the country's western
border, in a rain-forest town called Bonjoge. There Meghan picked up
the tribal language, Kalenjin, and befriended a pair of slightly older
sisters, trailing them around as they helped their mother fetch water
and cook the staple dish, maize. But it was different in Kurungu, which
is far more remote. Meghan was struggling with the language, and
English wasn't a workable option here as it was in Bonjoge. And she was
struggling even to find girls around her own age. When the family
visited the valley, she saw none. It seemed they stayed up in the
mountains, tending goats till it was time to be circumcised and
married. "Sometimes I think I can live without friends, I just don't
know," she told me, her golden hair falling past the many layers of
beaded necklaces - orange and black, yellow and blue - that encircled
her throat and shoulders. AIM missionaries get a year of home
assignment for every four years in the field. Meghan went to school
back in California for about half of second and fifth grades, and there
have been just two shorter trips home. The family's next stay in the
States won't come until December 2007. She let only a hint of despair
seep into her voice as she went on: "I didn't really hear God talk to
me telling me to be a missionary."
Her parents did. Rick and Carrie, whose Baptist church in California
is deeply evangelical, spoke of receiving signs, affirmations that they
were doing the right thing. Over the past century or more, Kenya has
been a highly proselytized country; to go by the broad estimates of the
U.S. State Department, 70 percent of Kenya's people now avow themselves
Christian, with most of the rest divided between Islam and indigenous
faiths. The Samburu, a tribe of about 150,000, worship their God, Ngai.
Dispatched by a range of Christian agencies and representing a range of
denominations, the missionaries strewn among the Samburu have made
little progress. Religious statistics about the tribe are scarce;
perhaps 2 to 9 percent are Christian. (Almost none are Muslim.)
Rick and Carrie talked about converting the Samburu in a new way.
They envision developing what they call a Samburu-style church. They
intend, gradually, to hold more and more Christian services not under a
roof but under the acacia trees amid the manyattas. They want the
sparsely attended church down the path from their house to be
superseded. And they plan to teach the lessons of the Bible not through
the preaching of written verses but through an emphasis on expansive
storytelling that will fit with the Samburu's oral tradition. Rick said
that the first lesson he had to impart, the first truth he had to
instill in the people, was "a sense of sin and separation from God" - a
separation that could be reconciled only through Jesus. He drew from 1
Corinthians to capture the essence of his message: "I give you Christ
and Him crucified."
He and Carrie expect the truth to bring more than religious
conversion. Once the people have accepted Jesus, they said, they hope
to coax them to judge their traditions by the standards of the Gospel.
In this way, they plan to inspire - not impose, they stressed - crucial
elements of transformation in the culture. They want to elevate the lot
of women, to end the ways women are treated as property. And they want
to stop the rite of female circumcision, which Carrie and Meghan
witnessed for the first time a few months before I arrived, the
razoring out of the clitoris that is almost universally practiced among
the Samburu. The Mapleses are in Kurungu, Rick said, because "there is
unbelievable need."
sense of humanity's dire need - need that is spiritual, need that is
earthly - impels a legion of American Christian missionaries out into
the world. Around 120,000 are currently stationed abroad, according to
Todd Johnson, director of the Center for the Study of Global
Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Massachusetts.
The legion includes members of mainline and evangelical Protestant
denominations; it includes Catholics and Mormons and members of the
nondenominational megachurches flourishing throughout the United
States. One-fourth, Johnson estimates, are spread over Africa, with
another quarter in Latin America, a quarter in Europe, one-sixth in
Asia and the rest cast over the islands of Oceania. The 120,000
accounts for only those committed to their distant posts for at least
two years; short-term missionaries are harder to track. But, tallying
only Protestants, the Billy Graham Center at Wheaton College puts the
number who served for between two weeks and a year in 2001 (the most
recent figure available) at 346,000. Some Christian emissaries are
driven solely to proselytize. Others limit themselves to good deeds, to
embodying Christ's message without speaking it aloud. For some, Johnson
told me, "if you don't mention Jesus in every other sentence, there's
something wrong." For others, "just handing out a cup of water is
enough." For most, the work involves both word and water.
In Africa, the continent of greatest earthly need, I had come to
know the work of missionaries fairly well before my trip to Kurungu. In
Sierra Leone, I spent time with a missionary couple from Grand Rapids,
Mich., who had raised their three children in a jungle village. Their
work ranged from baptizing converts in a stream to building a
gravity-fed system of pipes that would bring safe water to villagers
ravaged by disease. In southern Sudan, a land where perhaps two million
people were killed by almost a half-century of civil war even before
the terrors of Darfur began, I watched a missionary from Vienna, Va.,
try to create peace between embattled southern clans as a first step
toward ending the overarching war between north and south. He oversaw
the construction of a huge white tent in the middle of an empty plain.
Bargaining with freelance bush pilots, he arranged to fly clan
commanders to his meeting ground, to assemble them under his tent.
Several hundred ragged militiamen and child soldiers arrived on foot,
running across the desolate landscape toward the white canvas. Then the
missionary convened his peace conference. He preached gently from the
Gospels, and the commanders spoke of the suffering of their people and
pledged to quit their fratricidal attacks. If such gatherings could
help bring unity and strength across the Christian and traditionalist
south, and if his work could, in this way, compel the Muslim north into
an accord, the spread of peace would be, the missionary told me, "the
most powerful statement of the efficacy of the Christian message."
He wasn't at all alone in the scale of his missionary ambition in
Africa. Last year, Rick Warren, the California pastor whose books, "The
Purpose Driven Life" and "The Purpose Driven Church," have sold well
over 20 million copies and whose Saddleback Valley Community Church has
a weekly attendance of 23,000, declared Rwanda the world's "first
purpose-driven nation." The country would be a test target for his
global plan to eradicate spiritual deprivation along with physical
poverty and disease and illiteracy. "God gets the most glory when you
tackle the biggest giants," he told Christianity Today magazine. Last
summer he sent an advance team of about 50 American evangelicals to
meet with Rwandan leaders, and soon, he envisions, hundreds of
short-term Saddleback missionaries will fan out across the nation,
armed with kits of instruction and resources called "church in a box"
and "school in a box" and "clinic in a box" that will help them to
rescue the country.
Missionary dreams in Africa have long been outsize. David
Livingstone, the Scottish Protestant who first sailed to southern
Africa in 1841, yearned both to Christianize vast regions of the
continent and to eliminate the Arab slave trade. His explorations of
the African interior may have been journeys of white arrogance and may
have cleared a route for white imperialism, yet his best-selling
travelogues stirred outrage at what he described: "The many skeletons
we have seen. . .must be attributed, directly or indirectly, to this
trade of hell." Livingstone's expeditions helped to spark missionary
interest in sub-Saharan Africa, and by the late 19th century, the
Western missionary presence, which began with European naval
explorations in the 15th century and which had been confined mostly to
the coastlands, spread to the interior. Also during the 19th century,
the Protestant missionary force increased until it more or less matched
the Catholic deployment. Today, among American missionaries,
Protestants far outnumber Catholics, Johnson says, and evangelicals
have, since the 1960's, become the dominant strain.
In 1900, around 10 percent of sub-Saharan Africans were Christian.
Today the figure is about 70 percent, according to Johnson, with
Christians defined as those who profess the faith, though their
practice may involve a belief in traditional spirits. This tremendous
conversion occurred not only because the missionaries moved inland but
also because, more and more during the 20th century, they trained and
entrusted African pastors to do the proselytizing. Gradually, African
church leadership was encouraged - or became inevitable. Meanwhile, the
Scriptures were translated into tribal languages, and increasingly in
the later part of the century, missionaries embraced a movement of
"contextualization": adapting Christianity to local traditions so that,
say, a ritual dance telling a story of victory in battle might be
altered and included in Christian worship as a celebration of Christ's
victory over death - or so that, in the Mapleses' case, a church
building might be replaced by the trees. These days, American
missionaries tend to be keenly aware that, as Jonathan Bonk, executive
director of the Overseas Ministries Study Center, told me, "God doesn't
speak one language" and that Christian worship must take indigenous
forms. Rick, who often carries a walking stick of blond wood as the
Samburu do, is a kind of pioneer, not only because he has settled his
family in a place so far afield but also because he would like to leave
aspects of Western worship far behind.
ven
beyond conversion, and even beyond abolition, the impact of Western
missionaries in Africa has often been immense. When peace was finally
brokered between north and south in Sudan in January 2005, much of the
credit went to evangelicals like Franklin Graham, Billy Graham's son,
who runs the mission organization Samaritan's Purse. He and his staff
were well acquainted with the country's devastation, and one of his
hospitals had been bombed repeatedly in the south. He put pressure on
President Bush to make ending Sudan's conflagration a diplomatic
priority.
And when, in his 2003 State of the Union address, Bush called on
Congress to devote $15 billion to battle H.I.V./AIDS, it was, in strong
part, "a consequence of evangelical concern for Africa," Timothy Shah,
a political scientist and senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion
and Public Life, told me. Shah explained that this concern was
generated by missions. "No evangelical church is too small that it
doesn't have a significant portion of its budget and identity committed
to missions," he said. From their outposts, missionaries send open
"prayer letters" - long updates about their lives and requests for
prayer that will bless their work - to the congregations that support
them. At services and denominational conferences, returning
missionaries deliver speeches about all they've seen. "There's this
organic process that keeps people informed that's rare in American
life," Shah said.
With a president who is acutely attentive to the agendas of
evangelical Christians, he added, and with evangelicals making up a
majority of the Americans who venture out on missions, this process of
education, of information that runs from mission post to stateside
congregation, has gained particular importance. "The evangelicals'
increasing influence on foreign policy is the elephant in the room," he
told me. "It means more focus on a continent that otherwise gets
forgotten. You have a politically significant constituency behind
humanitarian concerns in Africa in a way that hasn't been the case in
many, many years." Shah spoke, too, about the influence of individual
mission leaders like Graham and Warren, who recently addressed the
Council on Foreign Relations, and like Andrew Natsios, a former vice
president of the huge Christian outreach organization World Vision
U.S., who served, from the first months of the Bush presidency until a
few weeks ago, as the head of the Agency for International Development,
the government's division for foreign aid.
None of this means that most missionaries, or even most evangelical
missionaries, see themselves as policy advocates. The Mapleses
certainly don't. In Kurungu, they rarely talk of world affairs. Their
devotion - to meeting the "unbelievable need" of the people - is
personal, local, solitary. Yet it is also one tiny part of a powerful
religiously driven interaction between America and Africa. And if the
Mapleses have their way, their work will transfigure the lives of the
Samburu. In a prayer letter last July, e-mailed to the States by
satellite phone, Rick and Carrie wrote about the circumcision of
Samburu girls: "Everything is cut away that would give them sexual
pleasure, all without the aid of anesthetic during the procedure or
painkillers afterward. As terrible as it is, it is so ingrained in the
culture that all the girls welcome it. Without circumcision, they would
never be married."
"Oh," the letter ended, in agony for the tribe, "how desperately they need Jesus."
' 'Two warriors are here, Dad," Meghan said one morning. We had just
finished breakfast - cereal bought, like almost all the family's food,
on trips to Nairobi made every several weeks, sometimes every three
months. Meghan's voice was casual; "warrior" and its Samburu
equivalent, moran, are words she uses often.
Rick went out the back door to talk with the moran, young men who'd
been initiated as herders of the Samburu's most-prized animals, their
cattle, and as soldiers if another tribe chose to attack. (No assaults
have come against the Samburu for several years, but the pastoralists
of northern Kenya have a long, ongoing history of violent rivalries,
and a few months earlier, about 60 miles east of Kurungu, a raid by one
herding clan upon another left more than 70 people shot or hacked to
death.) In wraps of red and blue, the two moran stood in the Mapleses'
yard, leaning slightly on long staffs of pale wood that they held to
their sides at identical 45-degree angles. Their bodies were nearly as
slender as the staffs.
In the Samburu that he'd learned to speak, haltingly, since arriving
in Kurungu, Rick gleaned that an elder in the moran's settlement had
fallen ill. Rick was soon navigating the Land Rover along vaguely
defined trails through the scrub, with the moran in the back seat. At
their manyatta, the old man, too weak to stand, was hoisted into the
back of the Land Rover. The nearest clinic, a few spare, clean rooms of
concrete, with Kenyan nurses but no doctor, is in the town of South
Horr, a half-hour from Kurungu. The clinic is run by a mission of
Italian Catholics.
These are the kinds of things that occupy part of Rick and Carrie's
days. They drive a crippled girl to be examined by an AIM missionary
doctor two hours away. They haul water from their well, in dozens of
jerrycans, to manyattas whose sources of water have vanished in recent
drought. Rick repairs Samburu machetes with his welding torch.
And because they do these things, the Mapleses are appreciated
around Kurungu, Andrea Lekalayo said. Andrea, who learned his English
at the Catholic mission's primary school in South Horr, is a young
elder; he'd just passed on from being a moran. He led a crew of moran,
adorned with beads and with plastic flowers, in digging a drainage
ditch for the mission airstrip. Rick and Carrie paid each man about $2
a day - undoubtedly another reason they were appreciated, in this place
with almost no cash economy.
The Mapleses were liked too, the moran said, with Andrea
translating, for trying to learn their language. They were liked for
spending time with the people, for asking lots of questions, for trying
to understand their culture, for attending their ceremonies. "Rick,"
Andrea said, laughing, "he is almost a Samburu." At break time, the
ditch diggers sat on the Mapleses' back porch as Meghan served them
tea.
But few around Kurungu seemed much interested in their religion. The
Samburu faith is monotheistic. It holds its own sacred history in
which, I was told, humankind had once been linked to Ngai by a ladder
made of leather. Ages ago, a Samburu man, enraged by the death of his
herd, cut the ladder, and ever since the people have been disconnected
from their deity. Yet when the Samburu spoke to me about Ngai, they
evoked not a divinity that is abstract and removed but one that is,
though invisible, close at hand, especially on the steep mountains that
bound the valley, and most especially on a particular set of ridges and
rocky peaks known collectively as Mount Nyiru. This, the tribe's most
hallowed mountain, about 9,000 feet high, rises immediately to the west
of Kurungu. It looms over the family's backyard. Ngai is up there,
taking care of his people. He had granted the Samburu the knowledge of
how to survive on cow's blood, Andrea and his crew said. And he was
forgiving when the people did wrong. He had placed a spring at the spot
where the leather ladder had been cut. The Samburu told me that their
religion makes no prediction of a messiah. They didn't seem to feel the
need for one.
"Lord," Carrie said, offering grace over lunch one afternoon, before
the family set out for a manyatta, where they would deliver jerrycans
of water and hold church in the open air, "we pray that the people
today thirst not only for water but for your word, Lord."
It was Carrie who first came to Africa, who was shown the first
signs that they were meant to be full-time missionaries. She and Rick
grew up in California churches. As teenagers, they went on brief
foreign missions: Carrie to Mexico, Rick to Mexico and New Guinea.
After they met, dated for about three years of sexual abstinence and
married, they talked sometimes about becoming missionaries when they
retired - talk that was safe, Carrie recounted; the prospect was too
far in the future to be real. Then, in 1996, a colleague in nursing
invited her along on a three-week mission to a hospital that AIM runs
just outside Nairobi. Right away, she wanted badly to go, but worried
that neither her husband nor her boss would allow her. "I thought it
could never happen," she said. That was when she received two early
signs: Rick told her that he would take care of Meghan, and the head
nurse agreed to adjust her schedule.
Carrie flew off to Kenya to help an American surgeon, a career
missionary who operated on children with polio or terrible burns that
had twisted their limbs or left their hands contracted and useless. She
saw them after their operations with feet that were straight, with
fingers that could hold her own. Returning home, she longed to be back
in Kenya full time, and without telling Rick, she wrote to AIM for
information. She filled out the application in secret, showing it to
her husband only when he confided that he, too, had been "convicted."
He recognized his desire one day at work, when he and his colleagues
were chatting about what they would do if they ever won the lottery.
His own answer, he said, had stunned him: he would quit his job and go
as a missionary to Africa.
AIM requires its 850 long-term missionaries (about 550 of them
American, 150 of them British and most of the rest from Canada,
Australia and South Africa) to pass through interviews and written
psychological tests, and to raise their own financing before they head
off for the field. Like many American mission organizations, AIM serves
as an administrative body; it supplies no financial support. This
system may not give missionaries a great sense of economic security,
but it promotes the feeling, as Rick put it, that "we're living on
faith; we have faith that God will provide for our needs." From four
California churches where they or their families were members, and from
about 50 individual donors, Rick and Carrie collected the money AIM
said they needed before setting out. (An AIM family in Kenya needs
about $50,000 per year to cover everything from living expenses to
insurance to administrative costs.) They collected it without any
trouble and took this to be another sign. When they put their Danville
house on the market, it sold within a day - yet another sign. "There
were so many green lights," Carrie remembered.
Reaching Kenya in 1998, they intended to stay two years; they would
move back home when Meghan had to start first grade. In the rain-forest
town of Bonjoge, Rick started a Christian secondary school, and Carrie
was the school nurse. She steered away from clinic work, partly because
she was dispirited by the fatalism that seemed to pervade Kenyan health
care; she focused mostly on Meghan's home-schooling. And Meghan
embraced her new life so readily that it was, Rick said, "the grace of
God" - another sign. So they extended their commitment to AIM for four
more years and looked to move someplace even more isolated when that
term was over. Now, in Kurungu, Rick talked about the clear indications
that he and his family were doing God's will: "I have found
satisfaction in a place that my culture" - American culture - "says
should not be satisfying to me. My experience backs up my faith.
Everything has gone miraculously well here. We've thrived. Meghan has
thrived. All of that leads us to believe that we're on the right track."
With this certainty, soon after Carrie said her prayer about thirst,
the family drove off to bring church to a manyatta. Richard Losieku
Lesamaja, the mission's Samburu pastor, rode with them. Seven years
ago, he was hired by the AIM missionaries, the Beverlys, who preceded
the Mapleses. The son of Samburu Christians, Richard was educated
through eighth grade at the Catholic mission school in South Horr. The
Beverlys employed him to preach on Sundays at their shedlike church.
The Mapleses still have Richard hold weekly services for the 20 or 30
Samburu, almost all of them women and young children, who gather under
the corrugated roof. On the previous Sunday when I attended, they
listened to Richard, who wore blue slacks and beleaguered sneakers,
preach in Samburu from Paul's teaching in 2 Corinthians: "Do not be
yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and
wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with
darkness?. . .Therefore come out from them and be separate."
But the congregation hadn't been growing, so Rick and Carrie began
driving Richard out to preach in the manyattas. Eventually, when Rick
learned the language well enough, and when he learned enough about the
culture, he said he planned to do some preaching himself and, much more
important, to devise Samburu-style versions of Christian stories and
lessons. He had yet to define any specifics for this cultural
transposition of Christianity. He was determined to go slowly, to
understand the Samburu first, then to proceed. But he imagined a team
of Samburu Christian leaders, armed with the teachings he would design,
starting a series of worship groups throughout the area. Each group
might have 12 Samburu and would spawn, in turn, three new leaders, who
would create new groups of their own. "It will be a geometrical instead
of a linear growth pattern," Rick, whose college minor was math, said.
The expansion would be exponential. In the meantime, though, Rick and
Carrie relied on Richard.
It was hard to tell how happy Richard was in his work. He told me
that he wanted to study at a Bible college, probably in Nairobi, but
that he didn't have the fees. "I don't like to disturb," he said,
explaining why he hadn't asked the Beverlys or the Mapleses for help
with tuition. "It has been seven years, and so far they are quiet."
Yet he dutifully preached where the Mapleses drove him, preached
from his worn Bible with the red covers. Its text was in Masai; he
translated, as he read, into Samburu. It wasn't hard for him; the
languages, like the tribes, are closely related. But it was hard to
attract listeners, as hard outdoors in the manyattas as it was in the
mission church. And in the manyattas even fewer men gathered, often
none at all. The moran were off somewhere, unseen, and the older men
tended to lounge under the best acacia tree, the one whose spindles
provided the best semblance of shade.
t
the cluster of huts we visited after Carrie's prayer, 12 or so women
sat on the dirt in front of Richard. Carrie, in a long denim skirt,
joined them. From the Land Rover Rick brought out a rope swing. He
knotted it to a tree a hundred yards from Richard, and he and Meghan
and Stephanie played with the young children so that the mothers could
focus on Richard's sermon. This was Rick and Carrie's program for
conversion, for now.
Rick predicted it would be different when his plan got under way.
Men, women, children all would be gradually drawn in; all would come to
know the facts of humanity's fall and its division from God. All would
come to know that, as Rick said, "Jesus was the perfect lamb" who
"became sin for us," who relinquished his life in the ultimate "blood
sacrifice" and who was the only way for humankind to connect with God
again.
In the manyattas spread below the ridges of the Samburu's sacred
mountain, with the miniature congregations of women gazing stone-faced
as Richard preached, and with the men playing bau, a game of pebbles on
a wooden board, in the spotty shade, it was easy to see Rick's
prediction as far-fetched to the point of pure impossibility. But at
the same time, it wasn't hard to think that his wishes would be
realized. The Mapleses' patience, which could be mistaken for
passivity, was strategic. It seemed to blend with the expanses of arid
land and the timelessness of Samburu life; it seemed almost like a
cover. And all the while the Mapleses were gaining trust and gathering
knowledge so that they would prevail in an area where other
missionaries had made little headway.
So much of the rest of Kenya had been Christianized - and back near
the beginning of that long process came the handful of missionaries who
founded AIM in 1895. Their endeavor must have seemed far more futile
than Rick and Carrie's did now. A little more than a year after
arriving in the British-ruled territory that is now Kenya, AIM's leader
died of malaria. The rest of his small team died of disease or left
soon after. Yet their vision won out. Wasn't it likely that the
Samburu, isolated within a converted nation, would eventually surrender?
At a Manyatta where the Mapleses took Richard to preach each week,
Meghan watched the circumcision. Most Samburu girls have the cutting
done just before their weddings, which often come when they are young
teenagers. Others have their clitorises excised as part of a Samburu
ceremony initiating and circumcising boys and young men as moran -
older sisters must be cut before their brothers can become warriors.
Since moving to Kurungu, Carrie and Meghan had been invited to attend
the circumcisions of three girls. Twice they stood outside the hut. But
once, they were invited inside along with a short-term missionary, a
female college student named Quinn, who was visiting the family from
North Carolina. It was dawn at the manyatta, the sun just starting to
illuminate the face of Mount Nyiru that rises above the settlement.
Inside the hut, the girl was naked except for ceremonial leather
sandals made by her father.
"Today," Meghan wrote in her diary, with the potted daisy on its
blue cover, "I saw something I don't think I will ever forget. I saw a
girl get mutilated. Her name was Santo. A 13-year-old girl having
something awful done. Quinn got the 'privilege' of holding her leg.
There was a lady holding her back very tightly! The circumciser had
Santo adjust herself so many times in the process. I was able to see a
little. I saw the circumciser literally sawing off the part with a
razor blade. Santo was brave and did not really cry. She eventually was
on her back almost crying. She had tears in her eyes. Later that day I
saw her sitting up, smiling. This is something I don't understand. It
seems so painful. There is no good thing done through the process, yet
people seem to like it so much. I will just have to pray that God helps
me to understand it and if he wants me to stop it I will pray for
courage."
Sometimes when Rick and Carrie discussed their mission in Kurungu,
it seemed they were devoted almost exclusively to conversion, that the
spiritual work, the work of the word, was almost all, and that
addressing earthly needs mattered, to them, very little. Good deeds,
though part of the calling, were problematic. Rick and Carrie didn't
want to come anywhere close to selling Christianity with trips to the
clinic or jerrycans of water. They spoke about liking the Samburu's
self-reliance because it relieved them of having to provide things that
would taint their religious mission. But then they would talk about
female circumcision. "It's a spiritual issue, it's a public-health
issue, it's a human rights issue," Rick declared, emphasizing that the
body is God's temple and to mar it, a sin. As the three of us sat at
their dining table, he and Carrie laid out a long-term plan both to end
the rite and to raise the status of Samburu women. "Once people have
accepted the Lord, we'll talk about how God created sex and ordained
sex, that sex is to be enjoyed," Rick said. "It is a gift to a man and
a woman who are married, and to take away God's gift of pleasure is not
right." During my time in Kurungu, we discussed sex much more often and
openly than I'd expected. "Most people," Rick explained, "think
evangelicals are anti-sex. It's a fallacy that's picked up from our
stance against premarital sex. Within the context of marriage, sex is
not only for procreation, it's for pleasure."
"The role of women - there are going to be some tough issues,"
Carrie said. She mentioned the way young Samburu girls are married off
to elderly men, and the way a wife is passed to her husband's brother,
or to another man in the family when the husband dies. She also
recalled a wedding they attended: when Carrie asked the groom - a young
man who occasionally worked for the family - what the name of his bride
was, he didn't know. "The woman is not a doormat," Carrie summed up the
message they would instill, and listed the biblical heroines and Gospel
teachings that would inspire the Samburu to change.
There were, for the Mapleses, limits to how high women should be
elevated. Both Rick and Carrie told me that it would "sit strange" for
women to hold the highest positions in any church, whether Kenyan or
American. Still, amid the Samburu culture, the Mapleses could seem to
be not only Christian crusaders but also bold and progressive social
activists, champions of female emancipation and sexual fulfillment.
But what sacrifice might their work require from the two girls
closest to them? Rick and Carrie saw their mission with the Samburu
taking years and years, and while Stephanie had just begun asking to be
dropped off to play with the small children of one of the Mapleses'
guards, Meghan wasn't sure how long she could endure her isolation in
Kurungu. We talked one day in the little round outbuilding that serves
as her schoolroom. Maps - of Africa, of the world - were taped to the
walls. A white-painted bookcase held "The Red Badge of Courage" and "To
Kill a Mockingbird." It held the same series of history books that my
kids, who are close to Meghan's age, used in a secular private school
in Brooklyn. And it held a science textbook called "Exploring Creation
With General Science," which urged its readers to "remember to give
glory to the One who authored nature." A lone table stood beneath a
small window, and there, in a patch of light, Meghan sat for a few
hours each morning, side by side with her mother to study most of her
subjects, and with her father to learn math.
And Rick was right. She was thriving: getting a high five from her
father as she fielded his geometry questions; smiling with her mother
over their mutual uncertainty about obscure points of grammar; and
learning, every time she bounded, in her confident way, out of her
house, more about the world than my expensively schooled kids could
begin to imagine.
But Rick and Carrie knew as well that she was struggling. After
their last home leave, after she went to public school near Danville
for half of fifth grade, when it was time to return to her African life
she "cried and cried and begged not to come back," Carrie said. Rick
acknowledged that he had been - and still was - concerned. "But we
wanted to give God the opportunity to work with us in the rough times."
With her long blond hair and layers of beads, with her face that
held Carrie's angles and Rick's frequent smile, Meghan told me, "I'm
pretty much a typical kid." She talked about shopping for clothes at
the mall back in California. She talked about how she thought longingly
of the dances and proms and middle- and high-school graduations that
she would miss over the coming years. She talked about her mixed
feelings over the likelihood that another AIM family, with kids around
her age, would be sent to join them, to live in Kurungu. She'd had
glimpses of missionaries who lived not at all as the Mapleses did but
in large, insular mission stations, where the children spent most of
their time with other mission kids. She didn't want a life even
slightly like that. Full of energy and interest, she wanted to be
forced out into the culture, no matter how alien she felt. Yet she
couldn't help wishing for the other family's arrival.
"Sometimes I have these breakdowns," she said, making an agonized
sound. Quickly, she recovered: "I feel really, really blessed." Then
she talked about the hall lockers her friends from fifth grade were
given as they moved up to middle school without her, and about the
Samburu language that, after more than a year of trying, she worried
she could not learn. She'd learned Kalenjin and a fair amount of
Swahili, but despaired that she might not have enough room within her
brain or strength to learn one more language.
"It seems like there's not any girls my age," she went on. "Most of
them are off in the bush." She'd developed a crush, though, on a young
moran. "But I wonder about what would happen - I'm one to think ahead,
people might laugh at that, but that's the way I am - if it was
serious. If we got married, would we have a Samburu wedding? What
continent would we live on? I don't know what would happen. He would
want to go this way and I would want to go that way."
Thriving; cut off; confused and frightened by the prospect of
spending the months and years of her growing up in a place that was not
hers - "I'm praying," she said, "that something's going to happen to
make me feel that I'm where I should be."
As the American missionary presence in Africa gained strength in the
early 20th century, Protestant missionaries began working to end female
circumcision. In Kenya, AIM was prominent within the campaign, which
stirred sometimes violent resistance among Kenya's largest tribe, the
Kikuyu. In 1930, an AIM missionary was murdered in her bed; by some
accounts, her killers circumcised her. The Kikuyu fight to protect the
ritual, which many saw as essential to their culture, helped to spur
their struggle against colonial rule and led, in part, to the warfare -
filled with atrocities on both sides - that eventually drove the
British from Kenya.
Yet the campaign has had a legacy of some success. Unicef estimates
that 32 percent of Kenyan women have been circumcised. National law now
forbids the circumcision of any girl younger than 17 and allows it,
after that, only by the woman's choice. Still, the law goes unenforced;
among tribes like the Samburu, few families abide by it.
The Mapleses can't be sure that even Samburu women want an end to
the practice. The men, who explain the cutting as a way to keep their
wives faithful, certainly don't. Carrie has scarcely raised the issue
with the women. She told me she had broached the subject only once,
with her housekeeper, who let out a sound of horror at learning that
Carrie was uncircumcised. (Though I managed to find a female
translator, my own conversation on the topic with three women wasn't
exactly freewheeling: they smiled and gave their repeated approval. "It
is Samburu," they said. "It is tradition.") But in the attendance of
women at their services, Rick and Carrie see a hint that the women feel
oppressed by their traditions and that they yearn for change.
It was almost impossible, as an outsider, not to think about the
state of the Samburu women the way Rick and Carrie do. It was almost
impossible not to wish for transformation. Yet it was hard for me not
to wonder how much change the culture could, or should, bear. For it
was hard to miss what the Samburu have. All across Africa, I had heard
cries of desperation, cries for Western rescue. But even in a season of
drought, with the threat that livestock would start to die, I heard
nothing like this from the Samburu.
The people seemed, as much as the people of any culture can,
satisfied with their lives. Their satisfaction was expressed not only
in the pleas they didn't make but also in the praise they gave
themselves. They talked about communal land, shared among the tribe's
herds, and about communal lives. "In your home," one man, who had
returned to Kurungu for a break from his job as a policeman in Nairobi,
explained to me, "you say, this is my bed. If a Samburu walks from here
all the way through the mountains, any place he sees a hut, the mat
inside will be his. To share, to sleep next to the others. There is
always a place. We don't have, this is my bed."
For simple dearth, for lack of modern ease, no village in Sierra
Leone or Sudan, Liberia or Congo surpasses existence in Kurungu. Yet
abjection didn't suffuse the air. The cramped, dark huts; the brilliant
clothes and beads; the clack of the wooden animal bells - this was life
as the Samburu had long lived it.
"Yes," Rick said, when I asked if he worried that the reverberations
of the spiritual and earthly changes he desired might disrupt or even
destroy the entire culture. "We're trying to minimize that danger." The
Samburu, he said, would see their communal values reflected in the
message of the Gospels, so that Christianity would bring not only
transformation but also affirmation. "But I won't argue against the
fact that I'm using my truth to affect Samburu culture."
And when I asked, Rick and Carrie said that they felt "a huge
concern" about race: they didn't want to be the great white
missionaries bringing the great savior to the black man. (Inevitably,
though, this old image hovers behind American mission work on the
continent. Probably fewer than 450 of the American missionaries in
Africa are African-American, according to Jim Sutherland, director of
the Reconciliation Ministries Network.) Rick spoke about developing -
and leaving behind when he and his family are gone from Kurungu -
Samburu mission leadership, Samburu "ownership" of the Christian faith.
On my last day with the Mapleses, Rick and Meghan and I set out with
Andrea and another Samburu, Lemarakwe Lepulelei, to climb one of the
faces of Mount Nyiru. We started in the predawn darkness and made our
way up as the light rose. Baboons chortled and barked. Lemarakwe
pointed out white specks in the distance, a herd of cattle being led by
moran in search of any bit of pasture they could find. He told about
plumes of steam that sometimes rose from one of the peaks above us for
long periods, steam that was a sign of Ngai.
We reached a high knob by late morning. Lemarakwe's home was here, a
few slanting huts, the ground between them covered completely in goat
dung. The wind blew fiercely, unblocked; we could see in all
directions: to Lake Turkana, the biggest desert lake in the world, and
to all the ridges of the sacred mountain. Rick stood gazing toward the
farthest ridge, the farthest peak. He stood at a precipice, and with
his brush of gray hair and narrowed blue eyes he looked almost as
fierce and unstoppable as the wind. I could hear, in my mind, a
question he asked as we talked a few days earlier: "Is there such a
thing as truth with a capital T?" For him, the answer was plain. Now he
said that every week he wanted to make long climbs like this, to learn
the paths and pastures and peaks, to know the herders' routes and the
cliffside dwellings, to know Nyiru itself. He didn't want his mission
limited to the manyattas in the valley. He would bring the Truth up
into the mountain.
Daniel Bergner, a
contributing writer, is the author of "In the Land of Magic Soldiers: A
Story of White and Black in West Africa." His last cover article for
the magazine was about the private military in Iraq.