«Som faar uden hyrde». Norsk Finnemisjon i et sørsamisk område primo 1900-tallet

This article discusses the Finnemission’s, “Lapp mission,” operations in the South Sami area between Majavatn and Bindal in Nordland county. In the 1800s, this area was still without significant agrarian settlements and the Sami maintained traditional reindeer herding as their main livelihood. In ea...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jostein Lorås
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Danish
English
Norwegian Nynorsk
Norwegian
Swedish
Published: MF Norwegian School of Theology, Religion and Society 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/6f73ba13499c49b9bfe0c36a289744cc
Description
Summary:This article discusses the Finnemission’s, “Lapp mission,” operations in the South Sami area between Majavatn and Bindal in Nordland county. In the 1800s, this area was still without significant agrarian settlements and the Sami maintained traditional reindeer herding as their main livelihood. In early 1900, the Finnemission established a boarding school, arranged outdoor meetings, built a missionary house, gathered census data about the Sami, held Christian gatherings and removed Sami artifacts from the area. A Sami drum of great symbolic importance to the mission was reluctantly delivered to the Norwegian Ethnographic Museum’s assistant, Paul Egede Nissen. The Finnemission’s presence led to an extensive pressure on the southern Sami culture in this area to assimilate to the dominant Norwegian culture (Norwegianisation). This was, however, not always an intended effect of the mission’s work.