The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism

How did the Sámi indigenous population in Varanger, the far north-east of Norway, perceive Christianity at the turn of the 18th century? In court records and written sources from missionaries, the Sámi are described as practicing Christian customs as part of their lived religion. The only Sámi prima...

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Published in:Scandia : Tidskrift för historisk forskning
Main Author: Jernsletten, Jorunn
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Swedish
Published: Stiftelsen Scandia 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lub.lu.se/scandia/article/view/24803
https://doi.org/10.47868/scandia.v88i2.24803
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spelling ftunivlundojs:oai:journals.lub.lu.se:article/24803 2023-06-11T04:15:12+02:00 The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism Varangersamenes kristne praksis i møte med misjon og kolonialisering Jernsletten, Jorunn 2022-11-28 application/pdf https://journals.lub.lu.se/scandia/article/view/24803 https://doi.org/10.47868/scandia.v88i2.24803 swe swe Stiftelsen Scandia https://journals.lub.lu.se/scandia/article/view/24803/22230 https://journals.lub.lu.se/scandia/article/view/24803 doi:10.47868/scandia.v88i2.24803 Scandia : Tidskrift för historisk forskning; Vol. 88 No. 2 (2022): Scandia. Thematic issue: Lived religion in premodern Northern Europe Scandia : Tidskrift för historisk forskning; Vol 88 Nr 2 (2022): Scandia. Temanummer: Levd religion i det förmoderna Nordeuropa 0036-5483 Sámi Indigenous Christianity Colonialism Mission ursprungsbefolkning kristendomen kolonialism info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2022 ftunivlundojs https://doi.org/10.47868/scandia.v88i2.24803 2023-05-31T22:28:54Z How did the Sámi indigenous population in Varanger, the far north-east of Norway, perceive Christianity at the turn of the 18th century? In court records and written sources from missionaries, the Sámi are described as practicing Christian customs as part of their lived religion. The only Sámi primary source is a drum used by Anders Poulsen. In connection to the court case against him in Vadsø in 1692, he offers a detailed description of how he uses the drum for divination in order to help people in need with the aid of the Christian trinity. The officials of the Danish King were convinced that Satan had lured the Sámi into performing his services. This demonology was at the core of Danish legislation and served as an ideological background for the colonialization of Sámi areas. The borders had not yet been drawn, which meant that the state affiliation of the Sámi inhabiting the border areas was at stake; in fact, the Russian church had been present in the adjacent Skolt Sámi area since the 16th century. The way in which Christianity was practised by Varanger North-Sámi indicates the influences of the Russian orthodox faith of their neighbours. Anders Poulsen is an example of someone whose religious and national identity defies the lines drawn by the states. He was born on the Swedish side of the inland area but lived most of his life along the coast of Norway. He used his drum to keep in contact with the forces that control the weather as well as the Christian deities, one of the most important being God’s mother, which he includes in the trinity. The Danish-Norwegian missionaries are currently presented as bringing the Christian gospel to the Sámi. The lived religion of the local Sámi was not recognized as a Christian faith but was interpreted as service to the Devil in disguise. When the backdrop was a contest for the Sámi traditional homelands, this portrayal of the Sámi as pagan in the 18th century served the state colonialism well. By reproducing this perception today, we neglect a history of the Sámi ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Sámi Sámi Skolt Sámi Vadsø Varanger Open Journals at Lund University (OJLU) Norway Vadsø ENVELOPE(29.749,29.749,70.073,70.073) Scandia : Tidskrift för historisk forskning 88 2
institution Open Polar
collection Open Journals at Lund University (OJLU)
op_collection_id ftunivlundojs
language Swedish
topic Sámi
Indigenous
Christianity
Colonialism
Mission
ursprungsbefolkning
kristendomen
kolonialism
spellingShingle Sámi
Indigenous
Christianity
Colonialism
Mission
ursprungsbefolkning
kristendomen
kolonialism
Jernsletten, Jorunn
The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism
topic_facet Sámi
Indigenous
Christianity
Colonialism
Mission
ursprungsbefolkning
kristendomen
kolonialism
description How did the Sámi indigenous population in Varanger, the far north-east of Norway, perceive Christianity at the turn of the 18th century? In court records and written sources from missionaries, the Sámi are described as practicing Christian customs as part of their lived religion. The only Sámi primary source is a drum used by Anders Poulsen. In connection to the court case against him in Vadsø in 1692, he offers a detailed description of how he uses the drum for divination in order to help people in need with the aid of the Christian trinity. The officials of the Danish King were convinced that Satan had lured the Sámi into performing his services. This demonology was at the core of Danish legislation and served as an ideological background for the colonialization of Sámi areas. The borders had not yet been drawn, which meant that the state affiliation of the Sámi inhabiting the border areas was at stake; in fact, the Russian church had been present in the adjacent Skolt Sámi area since the 16th century. The way in which Christianity was practised by Varanger North-Sámi indicates the influences of the Russian orthodox faith of their neighbours. Anders Poulsen is an example of someone whose religious and national identity defies the lines drawn by the states. He was born on the Swedish side of the inland area but lived most of his life along the coast of Norway. He used his drum to keep in contact with the forces that control the weather as well as the Christian deities, one of the most important being God’s mother, which he includes in the trinity. The Danish-Norwegian missionaries are currently presented as bringing the Christian gospel to the Sámi. The lived religion of the local Sámi was not recognized as a Christian faith but was interpreted as service to the Devil in disguise. When the backdrop was a contest for the Sámi traditional homelands, this portrayal of the Sámi as pagan in the 18th century served the state colonialism well. By reproducing this perception today, we neglect a history of the Sámi ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jernsletten, Jorunn
author_facet Jernsletten, Jorunn
author_sort Jernsletten, Jorunn
title The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism
title_short The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism
title_full The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism
title_fullStr The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism
title_full_unstemmed The Christian practice of the Varanger Sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism
title_sort christian practice of the varanger sámi in the face of missionary activities and colonialism
publisher Stiftelsen Scandia
publishDate 2022
url https://journals.lub.lu.se/scandia/article/view/24803
https://doi.org/10.47868/scandia.v88i2.24803
long_lat ENVELOPE(29.749,29.749,70.073,70.073)
geographic Norway
Vadsø
geographic_facet Norway
Vadsø
genre North Sámi
Sámi
Skolt Sámi
Vadsø
Varanger
genre_facet North Sámi
Sámi
Skolt Sámi
Vadsø
Varanger
op_source Scandia : Tidskrift för historisk forskning; Vol. 88 No. 2 (2022): Scandia. Thematic issue: Lived religion in premodern Northern Europe
Scandia : Tidskrift för historisk forskning; Vol 88 Nr 2 (2022): Scandia. Temanummer: Levd religion i det förmoderna Nordeuropa
0036-5483
op_relation https://journals.lub.lu.se/scandia/article/view/24803/22230
https://journals.lub.lu.se/scandia/article/view/24803
doi:10.47868/scandia.v88i2.24803
op_doi https://doi.org/10.47868/scandia.v88i2.24803
container_title Scandia : Tidskrift för historisk forskning
container_volume 88
container_issue 2
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