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Samuel Adjai Crowther - 9-th, 2004 - 09: 1 (Posted By: Webmaster)
Samuel Adjai Crowther
EXPLORER, AFRICAN EDUCATOR, AND BISHOP OF THE BRITISH REALM (1806--1892)
SAMUEL ADJAI CROWTHER, foe of the slave trade and the liquor traffic in Africa
and pioneer of civilization in the basin of the Niger, was the first Negro
on record to be ordained a bishop of the United Church of Great Britain and
Ireland.
Crowther was born in West Africa about 1806, and belonged to the Yoruba, one
of the oldest and most advanced of the tribes of Africa. His father, who was
a bale, or duke, was wealthy, having made his fortune by the weaving of a certain
fabric of his own design.
Adjai--he was so named because he was born with his
face to the ground--showed spirit and enthusiasm from his earliest years.
He was only ten years old when
he rescued a family from a blaze, which destroyed his home, plunging through
the flames to do so.
He started on his own as a breeder of poultry and cultivator
of African yams, walking seven miles each morning to his fields. He was successful
and prosperous.
The town in which he lived had 12,000 inhabitants and was protected by stockades
and a force of 3000 fighting men. One morning as he was about to leave for
his farm, he heard a great uproar. Rushing out he found that a battle was
in progress with an army of slave raiders. Victorious, the attackers seized
him,
his mother, and his brothers and took them to the coast where Adjai was torn
away from his mother and sold. In riveted chains, he and a group of others
were put aboard a Portuguese ship, the Esperanza Feliz, for transport to
America. In the filthy hold where he and his fellows were packed, young Adjai
suffered
frightfully from nausea and seasickness. On the third day out, sounds of
a commotion on deck came to him in the hold and soon afterward uniformed men
came below and marched him and the other terrified captives out.
Adjai thought
his end had come. But the newcomers were English sailors, whose ship, the
Myrmidon, had captured the Portuguese vessel. It was not easy to
reassure the slaves that they were really saved, and Adjai when taken aboard
the warship was alarmed when his glance fell on a side of newly-shaved pork
glistening white in the sunlight. It looked so much like the color of his
captors that he felt sure he had fallen among cannibals. Years later when he
met the
captain of the same warship under altogether different circumstances, both
laughed heartily at the incident. Adjai was taken to Sierra Leone and placed
in a missionary school, where he was baptized and given the name of Crowther.
From there he was sent to England
for further training and upon graduation he was sent back to Sierra Leone
to teach. His salary was only $5 a month, but he was grateful.
In those days Sierra
Leone was very unhealthful for Europeans. It was known as "the white man's
grave." Many missionaries succumbed to its fevers.
The Church Missionary Society decided, therefore, that if West Africa was ever
to be won over to Christianity, it would have to be largely through native
missionaries. Crowther seemed to them to be promising material in way.
Like
a true missionary, Crowther was self-sacrificing. Upon return from England
he had brought back with him many among them white stockings, clothes, and
a fine mattress that been a gift from his English friends. When the head
Haensal, a white man, advised him to part with these and live the simpler life
of the
native in order to gain more readily, Crowther gave them up without a murmur.
To thirst for classical knowledge, the young missionary added a desire to
know all the native tongues.
The most enthusiastic reports of his conduct were sent to England by his
superior, and his salary was increased to $ 10 a month. Soon afterward he
married a native
woman named Susan Thompson. Crowther was particularly grieved by the slave
trade and the whiskey traffic--the two great curses of Africa-and fought
them where he could. In 1838 he saw slavery
and slave trading formally abolished-but in the interior of the continent
both went on as actively as ever.
Queen Victoria, determined to end this, sent the
First Royal Niger Expedition to explore the basin of the Niger. The party
consisted of 150 Europeans and
only one Negro official-Crowther. Not all the white men were equal to the
task. Jungle diseases struck the party. First three white missionaries and
three
doctors died. In two months forty-two
of the whites were dead while the remaining 108 had been stricken and more
or less seriously incapacitated. The bulk of the work fell on Crowther, who
alone remained well. Thanks largely to him the expedition did not return
empty-handed. Instead it brought back valuable knowledge of native life and
languages; of
more effective methods for combating slave dealers, and of building up legitimate
trade. It also demonstrated that Africa's own sons were best fitted, physically
and psychologically, for doing missionary work.
Crowther won high praise for
his work. He was recalled to England to complete his studies, after which
he was regularly ordained. His first sermon, which
was preached to a white congregation at Northrup Church, was warmly praised
by Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, noted abolitionist, and others who had journeyed
especially to hear him. Upon his return to Sierra Leone Crowther was joyously
received by his fellow blacks, who were proud to see one of their number
a regular ordained minister.
Then, to crown all, he was unexpectedly reunited with his mother, from whom
he had been separated for twenty years and whom he had thought dead.
In 1851
he was again called to England, this time to discuss the slave question with
Queen Victoria herself. Arriving at Windsor Castle, he was ushered into
a magnificent drawing room, and when a handsomely dressed lady wearing a
long train entered, Crowther, thinking it was the Queen, stood up. But it was
only
one of her maids-of-honor, who had come to escort him to an upper drawing
room. There Prince Albert, the Queen's husband, the Prince of Wales, and other
members
of the royal family awaited him.
Prince Albert, with maps of Africa spread
out before him, plied Crowther with questions, which Crowther respectfully
answered.
But as he went on to tell
of the slave traffic, the bringing in of rum, and the injustices done his people,
he was swept away by emotion. Almost forgetting the rank of his auditors, he
did not spare their feelings. "It is the people in England," he said, "who
are to blame for sending out rum which destroys the natives physically and
morally, increasing the death rate frightfully and arousing the worst instincts
in them. Liquor is far worse than the idols we used to worship."
At times, out of respect, he checked himself, but his royal hearers, who listened
breathlessly, urged him to go on. Then, as it got dark, the Prince Consort
said, "Will Your Majesty kindly bring us that candle from the mantelpiece?" It
was only then that Crowther knew that the Queen had been present. He had seen
the stout and plainly dressed woman enter but had taken no special notice of
her. Fearing that his outspokenness might have offended his sovereign, he apologized,
but she assured him that she would not have had-him speak otherwise. She agreed
with him that Lagos was serving as the center of the slave traffic and said
that warships should be sent there to stop it.
The Prime Minister, who was
present, told of Crowther's translation of parts of the Bible into the Yoruba
language,
and at the Queen's request he recited
the Lord's prayer in that language. In addresses at the University of Cambridge
and to leading organizations in England he stirred his hearers with his ness,
his scholarly manner, and his
wide and authentic of Africa. Knowing that he would interest the majority
of hearers more by presenting Africa as a commercial proposition, told of its
wealth in ivory, gold, palm oil, lumber, and pointed that the present exports,
which did not exceed two million sterling, could easily be increased ten
times
if this commerce protected till it had gained a foothold.
The result was that
the British government sent another expedition up the Niger. Again the Europeans
suffered heavily in loss of lives and again Crowther won
added honor, the more so as it was this expedition that broke the back of
the West African slave trade. In doing this he was aided by the native chiefs,
who were so won by his sincerity that some of them became Christians. In
I864
he was again called to England, this time for an unusual honor--to be made
a bishop of the Anglican Church. Some objected on the grounds that
this was too great an honor for a black man--nevertheless, on June 29, 1864,
in the historic Cathedral of Canterbury, he was ordained with the title:
His Lordship, Bishop of the Niger.
Special trains were run from London and elsewhere
for the occasion, and the cathedral was filled to overflowing. Among those
who stood near Crowther on
the occasion was the former captain of the Myrmidon, now Admiral Sir H. Leeke.
Crowther returned to his work. The years that followed, however, were to
be the hardest and most trying of his career. War broke out once more in
Dahomey.
The slave traders were inciting the native chiefs to rebellion. Deprived
of their revenues, the chiefs yielded readily in the hope that the sale of
their
subjects would start again. Christian natives were persecuted.
Crowther went boldly into the midst of all this, in the name of Christ. On
one occasion he was kidnapped by Aboko, a cruel and treacherous chief, who
held him for a ransom of $5000. White men sent to free him were killed by
poisoned arrows. Crowther finally escaped.
He also succeeded in stopping several native
customs, one of which was the killing of twins and the banishment of their
mother. He ended this by preaching
sermons from Genesis XXV: 24: "And the Lord said to her: Two nations are
in thy womb." No home, he told them, could ever be looked on as having
a full share of heavenly blessings unless it had twins.
Everywhere he opposed the witch doctors and the means by which they kept the
people in terror. To show that Christ was superior he would walk boldly into
their Ju-ju huts, seize the most sacred idol there, and break it to pieces
before a horrified audience!
He also believed in "the gospel of the plough," and
introduced modern agricultural methods. Kindly, unobtrusive, upright, even
his enemies liked
him. But his diocese was too vast. It stretched a full thousand miles up the
Niger. Age and overwork were beginning to tell on him, and his vigilance relaxed.
Some of his native assistants, lacking his moral stamina, broke their religious
oaths. Conditions went from bad to worse. Some of his missionaries, both white
and colored, were guilty of grave religious misconduct, others grew lax and
negligent,
while some of the native members who were pledged to one wife returned to the
African custom of taking several. For this Crowther was being blamed in England.
Religious leaders there did not seem to realize that it was as difficult to
make European
ways work in Africa as it would have been to make African ones
work in England. Both represented thousands of years of evolution. They could
not understand polygamy was as much a part of African life as monogamy, adultery,
and prostitution were a part of European; and that the best the new ways would
be able to accomplish for some time to was a slight modification in the existing
customs; in short, cannot change the habits of a people overnight.
At last
came a horrible murder followed by a report from body of missionaries that
Christianity
on the Niger had sunk to low level. The central missionary
body in London sent out commission of inquiry, which found that many of the
char made were true. Some of Crowther's assistants were discharged. As to Crowther,
he was absolved from all blame. It was edged that to "his labors, life
and unique personality the work the Niger had owed its very existence," that "his
stainless was associated with every step of its advancement," and "when
the storm of trial came and it seemed as if shipwreck inevitable, his courage
and loyalty were not counted on in vain.'
Page, his biographer says:
Amid circumstances of almost unexampled difficulty, in the face discouragements,
he went steadily on his way with indomitable severance in a holy cause....
He lived in an atmosphere of sus and scandal, yet no tongue, however malicious,
of black man white man, ventured to whisper reproach against his personal reputation.Knowing
that the charges against some of his native assistants were not true, Crowther
defended these individuals. Under the strain and deep distress the
whole situation had caused him, his health gave way, and he died at Lagos on
January 9, 1892, at the age of eighty-six, after nearly sixty years of continuous
labor. Before his death the Royal Geographical Society presented him with a
splendid gold watch in recognition of his services to science. In 1932 a
costly stained-glass
window was unveiled in his memory in the Cathedral Church of Christ at Lagos.
UNIA Papers
[Marcus Garvey]
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