The Abundant Life Prevails: Religious Traditions of Saint Helena Island. (Book Reviews).The Abundant Life Prevails: Religious Traditions of Saint Helena Island Saint Helena Island: see Sea Islands. . By Michael C. Wolfe (Waco, Tex.: Baylor University Baylor University, mainly at Waco, Tex.; coeducational; chartered and opened 1845 by Baptists (see Baylor, Robert E. B.) at Independence, moved 1886 and absorbed Waco Univ. (chartered 1861). The library has a noted Robert Browning collection. Press, c. 2000. Pp. viii, 184. $24.95, ISBN ISBN abbr. International Standard Book Number ISBN International Standard Book Number ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 0-918954-73-8.) While most recent Sea Island scholarship emphasizes Gullah folklore and linguistics, Wolfe argues for a renewed attention to religion in order to understand the people of Saint Helena Island. He identifies Gullah religious traditions, a product of Christian and African beliefs and practices, as the source of St. Helena's community unity and survival. He also examines the force of religious faith in the work of the missionaries who came to the island and founded its Penn School in 1862, which later achieved renown as a community and civil rights center. Wolfe deals only briefly with the antebellum roots of Gullah religion and then recounts the familiar story of the 1862 Port Royal experiment The Port Royal Experiment was a program begun during the American Civil War in which former slaves successfully worked on the land abandoned by plantation owners. In 1861, the Union liberated the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina and their main harbor, Port Royal. that brought northern abolitionist teachers and missionaries to educate and Christianize the Gullah people in the New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt. way. When the war and the experiment ended, Ellen Murray and Laura Towne stayed on, expanding Penn School and funding it with their inheritances. The islanders sent their children to the school while continuing to maintain their syncretic syn·cre·tism n. 1. Reconciliation or fusion of differing systems of belief, as in philosophy or religion, especially when success is partial or the result is heterogeneous. 2. religious practices. Wolfe chose his book title fittingly; he makes his most significant contribution in his treatment of the "abundant life" movement (roughly 1900-1950), through which Penn School became a small part in a worldwide missionary effort to "save the world in our generation" (p. 62). Using personal papers and the speeches and writings of Penn School's new leaders, Rossa Cooley and Grace House, Wolfe portrays them as the twentieth-century counterparts of Towne and Murray: dedicated women steeped in the mission spirit and the teachings of the Social Gospel. They worked with islanders to bring about the "abundant life" in its material as well as spiritual components, and the island women enthusiastically attended classes on health and home management and actively worked to decrease infant mortality (hardware) infant mortality - It is common lore among hackers (and in the electronics industry at large) that the chances of sudden hardware failure drop off exponentially with a machine's time since first use (that is, until the relatively distant time at which enough mechanical . Penn School teachers also promoted scientific farming methods and spearheaded the formation of agricultural cooperatives by initially skeptical farmers, encouraged by their Baptist preachers. As a result, outmigration declined compared to other Sea Islands, a measure of success for the Saint Helena community. Penn School closed in 1948, but the renamed Penn Community Center played a significant role in the civil rights movement; with its Social Gospel and YMCA YMCA in full Young Men's Christian Association Nonsectarian, nonpolitical Christian lay movement that aims to develop high standards of Christian character among its members. connections, it was one of the few places in the South where biracial bi·ra·cial adj. 1. Of, for, or consisting of members of two races. 2. Having parents of two different races. bi·ra groups could meet in the 1950s and 1960s. Septima Clark and Myles Horton conducted Highlander citizenship schools, and members of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), civil-rights organization founded in 1957 by Martin Luther King, Jr., and headed by him until his assassination in 1968. , including Martin Luther King Jr., held retreats and planning meetings at Penn Center. Since Wolfe argues for the centrality of religion in St. Helena's community building, he should have devoted more attention to the roots of that religion in the antebellum era. Although he correctly states that by 1860 "[s]outhern blacks knew how to operate their own congregations and how to pastor their own people" (p. 8), it is unclear from this book where the Gullah people's knowledge and establishment of Christianity came from, how they practiced their religion, and how they interacted with white practitioners of religion before the Port Royal missionaries came. Wolfe failed to take full advantage of the literature on these topics, which would have strengthened his argument for religion's enduring roots on Saint Helena Island. However, his thorough and valuable treatment of the little-known, early-twentieth-century period of Penn Center's history adds this book to the essential works on the people of the Sea Islands. JANET D. CORNELIUS Penfield, Ill. |
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