Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries

ABSTRACT This article considers sickness and health within the context of intercultural encounter. The focus is on Moravian medical practitioners and the cure of diseases in eighteenth-century Labrador. Data is taken from the earliest Nain diaries, additional Moravian manuscripts, and ethnographic s...

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Published in:Journal of Moravian History
Main Author: Olsthoorn, Thea
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Pennsylvania State University Press 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/jmorahist.19.2.0156
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/psup/moravian-history/article-pdf/19/2/156/1219749/jmorahist_19_2_156.pdf
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spelling crpennstateupr:10.5325/jmorahist.19.2.0156 2024-06-02T08:09:33+00:00 Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries Olsthoorn, Thea 2019 http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/jmorahist.19.2.0156 https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/psup/moravian-history/article-pdf/19/2/156/1219749/jmorahist_19_2_156.pdf en eng The Pennsylvania State University Press Journal of Moravian History volume 19, issue 2, page 156-181 ISSN 1933-6632 2161-6310 journal-article 2019 crpennstateupr https://doi.org/10.5325/jmorahist.19.2.0156 2024-05-07T14:14:52Z ABSTRACT This article considers sickness and health within the context of intercultural encounter. The focus is on Moravian medical practitioners and the cure of diseases in eighteenth-century Labrador. Data is taken from the earliest Nain diaries, additional Moravian manuscripts, and ethnographic studies. An examination of Moravian healing techniques and their appreciation by the indigenous population shows that Inuit judged the missionaries’ practices in accordance with their own beliefs and incorporated them into their traditional healing system. Pietists’ holistic methods, which included the treatment of the patient’s soul together with his body, corresponded with the Inuit’s conviction that most physical ailments arose from a moral cause (violation of taboo). Despite the Moravians’ hope of the persuasiveness of their cures, the success of their medical procedures—invariably attributed to the healing force of the Savior—did not convince Inuit to abandon their allegiance to the spirits and convert to Christianity. They continued to call on the angakkuit (shamans) for help and followed their instructions alongside of the brethren’s medical treatments. The consulted primary sources also suggest that shamans only resorted to the missionaries’ cures in life-threatening situations. Article in Journal/Newspaper inuit Nain Penn State University Press Nain ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542) Journal of Moravian History 19 2 156 181
institution Open Polar
collection Penn State University Press
op_collection_id crpennstateupr
language English
description ABSTRACT This article considers sickness and health within the context of intercultural encounter. The focus is on Moravian medical practitioners and the cure of diseases in eighteenth-century Labrador. Data is taken from the earliest Nain diaries, additional Moravian manuscripts, and ethnographic studies. An examination of Moravian healing techniques and their appreciation by the indigenous population shows that Inuit judged the missionaries’ practices in accordance with their own beliefs and incorporated them into their traditional healing system. Pietists’ holistic methods, which included the treatment of the patient’s soul together with his body, corresponded with the Inuit’s conviction that most physical ailments arose from a moral cause (violation of taboo). Despite the Moravians’ hope of the persuasiveness of their cures, the success of their medical procedures—invariably attributed to the healing force of the Savior—did not convince Inuit to abandon their allegiance to the spirits and convert to Christianity. They continued to call on the angakkuit (shamans) for help and followed their instructions alongside of the brethren’s medical treatments. The consulted primary sources also suggest that shamans only resorted to the missionaries’ cures in life-threatening situations.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Olsthoorn, Thea
spellingShingle Olsthoorn, Thea
Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries
author_facet Olsthoorn, Thea
author_sort Olsthoorn, Thea
title Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries
title_short Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries
title_full Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries
title_fullStr Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries
title_full_unstemmed Healing Body and Soul in Labrador: The Practice of Medicine by Early Moravian Missionaries
title_sort healing body and soul in labrador: the practice of medicine by early moravian missionaries
publisher The Pennsylvania State University Press
publishDate 2019
url http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/jmorahist.19.2.0156
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/psup/moravian-history/article-pdf/19/2/156/1219749/jmorahist_19_2_156.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542)
geographic Nain
geographic_facet Nain
genre inuit
Nain
genre_facet inuit
Nain
op_source Journal of Moravian History
volume 19, issue 2, page 156-181
ISSN 1933-6632 2161-6310
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5325/jmorahist.19.2.0156
container_title Journal of Moravian History
container_volume 19
container_issue 2
container_start_page 156
op_container_end_page 181
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