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Church of England Zenana Missionary Society

The Church of England Zenana Missionary Society (CEZMS; founded 1880),[1] also known as the Church of England Zenana Mission, was a British Anglican missionary society established to spread Christianity in India. It would later expand its Christian missionary work into Japan and Qing Dynasty China. In 1957 it was absorbed into the Church Missionary Society (CMS).

History

The society arose out of a split in the Zenana Bible and Medical Missionary Society who had denominational disputes.[2] The Anglican church created the Church of England Zenana Missionary Society by the example of the Baptist Missionary Society, which had inaugurated zenana missions in India in the mid-19th century. Women in India at this time were segregated under the purdah system, being confined to a women's quarters known as a zenana into which it was forbidden for unrelated men to enter. The zenana missions were made up of female missionaries who could visit Indian women in their own homes with the aim of converting them to Christianity.

The purdah system made it impossible for many Indian women, especially high status women, to access health care, and many were dying and suffering needlessly. By training as doctors and nurses, the women of the zenana missions were accepted by the women of India into their homes in a way that men would not have been. The zenana missions expanded from just home visits to open mobile clinics in rural areas, women only hospitals and all girl schools, all staffed and run by women both recruited in Britain and those recruited and trained locally in India.

The success of the Baptists in gaining local acceptance would lead to the creation of Anglican zenana missions in 1880, and the adoption of similar tactics in countries which practised segregation of men and women, the society became active in Qing dynasty China in 1884,[3] Japan in 1886, and Sri Lanka (at that time known as Ceylon) in 1889. The work of the society was supported by the endowment of trusts by notable people of Victorian England. The society was also supported by the New Zealand Church Missionary Association, which was formed in 1892.[4] Four members of the society were murdered in the Kucheng massacre on 1 August 1895.[5]

Fujian was to be the main focus of society's expansion into China, with its first mission station being established outside the provincial capital of Fuzhou in 1884. Mission stations were added in Nantai in 1886, Kucheng in 1889, Luoyuan in 1893, Jian'ou, Pingnan and other sites in 1903, Songxi in 1907, and Pucheng in 1908. Hunan was the second Chinese province in which the society was active with, amongst others, mission centres being opened in Hengzhou in 1910 and Yongzhou in 1916. The third and last province in which the society opened a mission centre was Guangxi, with a centre being established in Guilin in 1916.[6] In the Diocese of Fujian (Fokien) in 1908 there was a large staff of CEZMS workers.[7]

In 1911, the society had a staff of 1288.[8] In 1912, the churches founded by the society joined other Anglican churches in China to form the Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui, the Anglican-episcopal church in China.

The activities of the society in India were wound up in the years following Indian independence and came to an end in China in 1950 shortly after the establishment of the People's Republic. In 1957, the Church of England Zenana Society was absorbed into the Church Mission Society, an organisation it had worked alongside for many years. A board of trustees existed until 1968 to transfer and administer the society's property and trust funds.

Legacy

Some schools and hospitals established by the society still operate in India, some still bearing Zenana as part of their name.

In E. M. Delafield's comic masterpieces, the "Provincial Lady" series, "an Illustrated Paper 'reaches the hands of [her daughter], who says Oh, look at that picture of a naked lady, and screams with laughter. Ascertain later that this description, not wholly libellous, applies to full-page photograph of Pamela Pringle [a promiscuous socialite] - wearing enormous feathered headdress, jewelled breast-plates, one garter, and a short guaze skirt - representing Chasitity at recent Pageant of Virtue through the Ages organised by Society Women for the benefit of Zenana Mission'[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Church of England Zenana Mission (CEZMS) 中華聖公會(女部) Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "School of Oriental and African Studies Library: Interserve England and Wales". www.mundus.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 2018-03-14. Retrieved 2020-07-18.
  3. ^ Church of England Zenana Mission (CEZMS) 中華聖公會(女部) Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Stock, Eugene (1913). "The Story of the New Zealand Mission". Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  5. ^ Maggillivray, Donald, (1907): A Century of Protestant Mission in China (1807-1907), Shanghai, American Presbyterian Mission Press
  6. ^ Church of England Zenana Mission (CEZMS) 中華聖公會(女部) Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Archdeacon Banister Twentieth Century Impressions of Hongkong, Shanghai, and other Treaty Ports of China/The Anglican Communion
  8. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "England, The Church of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 453.
  9. ^ The Provincial Lady Goes Further Diary entry for April 19th

Further reading

  • Amritsar St Catherine's Hospital. Annual Report; 1890-1907
  • Barnes, Irene H. Between Life and Death: the story of C. E. Z. M. S. medical missions in India, China, and Ceylon. London: Marshall Brothers, 1901
  • Codrington, F. I. [1928] Chopsticks. London: CEZMS 27 Chancery Lane, London
  • Codrington, Florence I. [1934] Hot-Hearted: some women builders of the Chinese Church. London: CEZMS
  • Latham, Susie F. (Susanna Frances) (1902) Memories of Zenana Mission Life. London: Religious Tract Society, [1902]
    • --do.--reprinted; with a biographical foreword written by her husband, the Rev. William Latham. London: Religious Tract Society, 1921
  • Liverpool & District Auxiliary of the Baptist Zenana Mission, Report 1903-1904
  • Macfee, K. J. & Codrington, Florence I. [1927] Eastern Schools and Schoolgirls. An account of the educational work of the Church of England Zenana Missionary Society. London: CEZMS
  • Murray, Jocelyn, Proclaim the Good News: a short history of the Church Missionary Society, London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1985 ISBN 0-340-34501-2.
  • Roy, Benoy Bhusan & Ray, Pranati (1998) Zenana Mission: the role of Christian missionaries for the education of women in 19th century Bengal. Delhi: Indian Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge ISBN 8172144776
  • Walker, Clare de Noé (1903) Nursing Lessons prepared for the Indian Probationers of the Zenana Mission Hospital, Bangalore. London: Christian Literature Society for India
  • Church of England Zenana Missionary Society (1883). India's Women (and China's Daughters)., Volume 3. p. 283. Retrieved May 17, 2014.
  • Records of the Church of England Zenana Missionary Society at the Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham[1]
  1. ^ "Church of England Zenana Missionary Society". University of Birmingham Calmview entry for the Church of England Zenana Missionary Society. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
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