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Navigating ethnicity, nationalism and Pan-Africanism – Kimbanguists, identity and colonial borders


Mika Vähäkangas

Abstract

The Kimbanguists, whose church is based on the healing and proclamation ministry of Simon Kimbangu in 1921 in the Belgian Congo, challenge  colonially defined borders and identities in multiple ways. Anticolonialism is in the DNA of Kimbanguism, yet in a manner that contests the colonially  inherited dichotomy between religion and politics. Kimbanguists draw from holistic Kongo traditions, where the spiritual and  material/political are inherently interwoven. Kimbangu’s home village, Nkamba, is the centre of the world for them, and Kongo culture and the  ancient kingdom form the backdrop of the Kimbanguist view of the new eschatological order to come. The reunification of the kingdom from the  two Congo states and Angola will mark the inauguration of the new era. This will not, however, mean a splintering of the Democratic Republic of  Congo but rather a removal of the colonial borders. That hints towards a Pan-African vision of a united Africa and even a universally united Black  race that will play a central role in the eschatological salvation historical drama. The Kimbanguist vision also contains global dimensions, and their  view of borders and identities is like Nkamba-centred ripples in water. This vision wipes away colonial borders and relativises ethnic, national and  racial identities whilst strongly subscribing to a salvation historical narrative that places Africa and Africans in the centre.


Contribution: This article  contributes to the study of nationalism as well as of African Instituted Churches. The analysis of how the Kimbanguists relate to (Kinshasa)  Congolese nationalism, Kongo ethnic identity and Pan-Africanism as well as of their global missional views reveals layers and complex patterns of  relationship between all these. What facilitates the simultaneous subscribing to all these layers is an openness of identities (Kimbanguist  national,  ethnic, etc.), as well as a tendency to see the world as consisting of interdependent areas and human communities with their holy city, Nkamba, in  the centre.  


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eISSN: 2072-8050
print ISSN: 0259-9422