Zenana missions
The zenana missions were outreach programmes established in
Background
Women in India at this time were segregated under the purdah system, being confined to women's quarters known as a zenana, which men unrelated to them were forbidden 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 needlessly dying and suffering. By training as doctors and nurses, the women of the zenana missions could be accepted by the women of India in a way that men would not have been.
History
The
By the 1880s, the zenana missions had expanded their ministry, opening schools to provide education for girls, including the principles of the Christian faith. This programme also included home visits, the establishment women's hospitals and the opening of segregated women's wards in general hospitals. One society, the Zenana Bible and Medical Mission, was involved in recruiting female doctors, both by persuading female doctors in Europe to come to India and by encouraging Indian women to study medicine in their pursuit of conversion. As a result, the Zenana missions helped break down the male bias against colonial medicine in India to a small extent.[5]
In the 1930s, the Zenana missions expanded further into healthcare. The Elizabeth Newman Hospital was opened by Beatrice Marian Smyth. This sixty bed hospital assisted with blood transfusions, child births, and anaemia cases among men, women, children, and people from all over Kashmir, India.
The work of the Baptists inspired the formation of a
Bible women in India
Educated Indian Christian women, who worked as assistants to the zenana missionaries were known as Bible women. They came from notable families and worked among poor women in villages, towns, hospitals, schools, etc. The Bible women, helped bridge the vast cultural differences between the English missionaries and the village folk. The Bible women used indigenous ideas to teach and preach their ideals of a Christian God to the women of the subcontinent. They used music to reach out to its wide audience - to attract more women and to provide a commentary on the verses from Bible. Bible women wore white saris and carried cloth covered Bibles, representative of their virtuous identity. They stopped wearing jewellery and deprived themselves of all forms of vanity.[8] Bible women took up various roles in the zenana missions. They taught in girls' schools, which were attended by all classes. Bible women visited the zenana, taught women and girls there, preached religious values and worked for the general good of the women. They also visited native women in hospitals and homes, providing healthcare services and facilities.[9]
References
- ^ Original caption: "High caste women in zenana at Harkua village in Gopalganj." A zenana (literally meaning "pertaining to women") was the part of the household reserved for women in Muslim south Asian households. These living quarters would be visited by the wives of missionaries as part of mission work.
- ^ "When he [Thomas Smith] went to India, it was impossible for male missionaries to reach the women, all of whom above the very lowest class were shut off from the society of men. Smith's proposal in the 'Christian Observer' in 1840 to send lady missionaries and governesses, both European and Indian, into the zenana bore fruit in the first Zenana mission, which was started in 1854."--William Forbes Gray Smith, Thomas (1817-1906) (DNB12)
- ^ Pitman, Emma (1903). Indian Zenana Missions. England: John Snow & Co. pp. 20–21.
- ^ "Normal School - Banglapedia". en.banglapedia.org. Retrieved 2019-01-19.
- ^ Richter, Julius (1908). A history of missions in India. Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier.
- ISBN 978-0-8028-3875-9.
- ^ "Records of the Church of England Zenana Missionary Society - Archives Hub". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 2019-01-19.
- S2CID 161222435.
- ^ Pitman, Emma (1903). Indian Zenan Missions. England: John Snow & Co. pp. 36–38.
External links
- Emma Raymond Pitman Indian Zenana Missions. London: John Snow, [1890?]
- Helen Catharine Mackenzie: Life in the Mission, the Camp, and the Zenáná; or Six Years in India. London: Richard Bentley, 1853.