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Featured researches published by Gerrie ter Haar.


Foreign Affairs | 2005

Worlds of power : religious thought and political practice in Africa

Stephen Ellis; Gerrie ter Haar

With Christian revivals (including Evangelicals in the White House), Islamic radicalism and the revitalisation of traditional religions it is clear that the world is not heading towards a community of secular states. Nowhere are religious thought and political practice more closely intertwined than in Africa. African migrants in Europe and America who send home money to build churches and mosques, African politicians who consult diviners, guerrilla fighters who believe that amulets can protect them from bullets, and ordinary people who seek ritual healing: all of these are applying religious ideas to everyday problems of existence, at every level of society. Far from falling off the map of the world, Africa is today a leading centre of Christianity and a growing field of Islamic activism, while African traditional religions are gaining converts in the West. One cannot understand the politics of the present without taking religious thought seriously. Stories about witches, miracles, or people returning from the dead incite political action. In Africa religious belief has a huge impact on politics, from the top of society to the bottom. Religious ideas show what people actually think about the world and how to deal with it. Ellis and Ter Haar maintain that the specific content of religious thought has to be mastered if we are to grasp the political significance of religion in Africa today, but their book also informs our understanding of the relationship between religion and political practice in general.


Journal of Modern African Studies | 1998

Religion and politics in Sub-Saharan Africa

Stephen Ellis; Gerrie ter Haar

There is a thriving literature of religious tracts in Africa. The few formal bookshops, and the far more numerous market-stalls and itinerant hawkers who sell books, offer for sale pamphlets and popular works on religious subjects in every country of the continent, it would seem. Some are theological inquiries into aspects of the Bible or the Koran. Others contain moral lessons derived from these sacred books. Perhaps the most common category, however, is testimonies of personal religious experiences. Much of this literature hardly makes its way outside Africa and is only rarely to be found in even the finest Western academic libraries. The most puzzling genre, at least for anyone educated in modern Western academies of learning, is that of the numerous works on witchcraft and other perceived forms of evil, sometimes in the form of a description of a personal journey into a world of spirits. While many pious works on Christianity on sale in Africa are authored by American evangelicals and published in America, popular books on witchcraft and mystical voyages are almost invariably written by Africans and published locally. Similar material is circulated through churches, sometimes in the form of video recordings. This is also true of African-led churches in the diaspora, among African communities on other continents. It is impossible to know with certainty how many people give any credence to stories like these, but the indications are that very many do so. Not only do pamphlets describing mystical journeys appear to circulate in large numbers, but such accounts may clearly be situated within an older tradition of stories about witchcraft and journeys into the underworld which is to be found in collections of folklore and even in the literature of high culture. Studies of churches and of healers in almost any part of Africa indicate that incidents of perceived witchcraft and of shamanism or near-death experiences are relatively common, and probably have been for as long as it is possible to trace. Such evidence may be drawn not just from studies of the pentecostal churches which have attracted so much scholarly interest of late, but also of many other sorts of church including African independent congregations, of Muslim communities and of indigenous religious traditions. Thus, the popular literature written by people who claim to have experienced spiritual journeys or to have expert knowledge of witchcraft is not, we believe, an ephemeral genre but rather represents a modern form of an important tradition of mysticism in Africa.


Journal of Modern African Studies | 2007

Religion and politics: taking African epistemologies seriously

Stephen Ellis; Gerrie ter Haar

Religious modes of thinking about the world are widespread in Africa, and have a pervasive influence on politics in the broadest sense. We have published elsewhere a theoretical model as to how the relationship between politics and religion may be understood, with potential benefits for observers not just of Africa, but also of other parts of the world where new combinations of religion and politics are emerging. Application of this theoretical model requires researchers to rethink some familiar categories of social science.


Journal of Religion in Africa | 1992

Spirit of Africa : the healing ministry of Archbishop Milingo of Zambia

Aylward Shorter; Gerrie ter Haar

After his appointment as RC Archbishop of Lusaka in 1969, Emmanuel Milingo became aware of his healing powers. Members of his congregation believed him to be able to liberate them from evil spirits. This work examines Milingos life and work and the conflict surrounding his healing ministry.


The European Journal of Development Research | 2006

The Role of Religion in Development: Towards a New Relationship between the European Union and Africa

Gerrie ter Haar; Stephen Ellis


Journal of Religion in Africa | 2000

Halfway to Paradise: African Christians in Europe

Roswith Gerloff; Gerrie ter Haar


Africa | 1993

Spirit of Africa: The Healing Ministry of Archbishop Milingo of Zambia

R. E. R. M. Carmen; Gerrie ter Haar


Africa | 2009

THE OCCULT DOES NOT EXIST: A RESPONSE TO TERENCE RANGER

Gerrie ter Haar; Stephen Ellis


Journal of Religion in Africa | 2000

Strangers and sojourners : religious communities in the diaspora

Gerrie ter Haar


African Affairs | 2003

A wondrous God: Miracles in contemporary Africa

Gerrie ter Haar

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