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11 - Quakers in Africa

from Part III - Regional Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2018

Stephen W. Angell
Affiliation:
Earlham School of Religion, Indiana
Pink Dandelion
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham
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Summary

The essay begins with an introduction to the historical and cultural context of present day African Friends and their considerable diversity even within a given region of a given country. A “thick” ethnographic description of the beliefs, practices and community among a specific community of Friends, at Vozoli Village Meeting, part of Keveye Monthly Meeting, in Chavakali Yearly Meeting, Kenya, follows.
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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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References

Suggested Further Reading

Angell, Stephen W. (2006). “Quaker Women in Kenya and Human Rights Issues,” in Smith, R. Drew, ed. Freedom’s Distant Shores: American Protestants and Post-Colonial Alliances with Africa, Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, pp. 111–30.Google Scholar
Friends United Meeting. (2011). Faith and Practice of Friends in East Africa, Kisumu, Kenya: Friends United Meeting.Google Scholar
Kimball, Herbert and Kimball, Beatrice. (2002). Go into All the World: A Centennial Celebration of Friends in East Africa, Richmond, IN: Friends United Meeting Press.Google Scholar
Painter, Levinus K. (1966). The Hill of Vision: The Story of the Quaker Movement in East Africa 1902–1965, Kaimosi, Kenya: East Africa Yearly Meeting.Google Scholar
Riggs, Ann K. (2014). “Friends in Eastern Africa,” Quaker Religious Thought 123–24 (November): 8592.Google Scholar

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