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/ Yoseki. Copy of Mr Kimbers. Congo, ca. 1920-1930

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Title
Yoseki. Copy of Mr Kimbers. Congo, ca. 1920-1930
Creator
Unknown
Date Created and/or Issued
1920/1930
Publication Information
University of Southern California. Libraries
Contributing Institution
University of Southern California Digital Library
Collection
International Mission Photography Archive, ca.1860-ca.1960
Rights Information
Centre for the Study of World Christianity
Contact the repository for details.
The University of Edinburgh School of Divinity, New College, Mound Place, Edinburgh EH1 2LX, United Kingdom
divinity-CSWC@ed.ac.uk
http://www.cswc.div.ed.ac.uk/collections/
Description
Black and white lantern slide showing a group in the Congolese village of Yoseki, in the northern half of the country. The group of men, women and children are smartly dressed: women wear dresses with headwraps, children wear wraps or smocks, and men wear shirts. An elderly man sits in the centre of the picture, with the arms of the woman immediately behing him on his shoulders. He wears a light safari suit and a wide-brimmed hat, indicating his status in the religious community. Palm trees and a thatched dwelling can be seen in the background of the picture. The slide is captioned, "Yoseki. Copy of Mr Kimbers." Yoseki was opened as a mission station of the Congo Balolo Mission in 1913. Sidney W Kimber, his wife and their two children worked as missionaries in the 1920s. Black and white lantern slides showing two Congo slave women. The women sit facing one another on a wooden bench in wrap dresses. One woman wears an ornament through her ear, whilst her companion wears a thin bracelet. Scarification marks can be seen on the arm of each woman. In the Congo, marking the body through scarring in patterns then controlling the healing process was an important cultural signifier, often carried out to indicate life stages or cultural belonging, with peoples of the Congo having some of the most complex designs in Africa. In women, scarification marks were added to intenisfy beauty, or to mark stages in life, such as childbirth - bearing the pain involved in the process was believed to be a path to adulthood and a sign of strength that would be needed in childbearing. The heads of the women are slightly elongated, as a likely result of the practice of headbinding. The malleable skulls of babies would be wrapped tightly in cloth in order to produce an elongated head shape, mostly as a sign of cultural belonging and beauty. The Mangbetu people of the Congo practised head binding, and it is to this group that these women may belong. In the memoir of the work of her husband and herself for the Congo Balolo Mission, Lily Ruskin also speaks of head binding for babies of the Yamongo people, whom Edward Algernon Ruskin first encountered in 1895. This slide comes from a collection generated by missionaries working for the Congo Balolo Mission, a mission begun in 1889 under the supervision of the East London Training Institute for Home and Foreign Missions that developed into the interdenominational evangelical mission Regions Beyond Missionary Union after 1900.
Format
lantern slides 8.2 x 8.2cm
lantern slides
photographs
Identifier
IMP-CSCNWW33-OS11-31.tif
http://doi.org/10.25549/impa-c123-78097
http://thumbnails.digitallibrary.usc.edu/IMP-CSCNWW33-OS11-31.jpg
Subject
Christianity
Religious groups
Congo Balolo Mission
Men
Women
Portraits, group
Christians
Protestants
Group portraits
Time Period
1920/1930
Place
Africa
Congo
populated places
Source
CSCNWW33/OS11/31 [File]

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