HOW CHRISTIANITY CAME TO MANIPUR
Lal Dena
The
first missionary who came to Manipur was Rev William Pettigrew, Edinburgh,
Scotland, under the sponsorship of the Arthington Aborigines’ Mission which was
named after its founder, Robert Arthington, a millionaire at Leeds. By
denomination, William Pettigrew belonged to the Church of England. He left
England for India on 16 December, 1890 and came to Bengal. On being told that
Manipur, an erstwhile princely state was still a virgin area, Pettigrew came to
Cachar, Assam to enter Manipur. As the Anglo-Manipur war,1891 was then going
on, Pettigrew was made to wait for three years at Cachar and during that time
he learnt Bengali and Manipuri
(Meiteilon).
Consequent
upon the conclusion of the war in 1891followed by the consolidation of the
British colonial rule over the state of Manipur, A.Porteos, officiating
political agent,1893-95, had given permission to William Pettigrew to enter
Manipur without referring the matter to the Government of India. Pettigrew came
to Imphal on 6 January, 1894 and began to think that his missionary call must
have been among the Hindu Meiteis of the Manipur valley and soon started his
proselytizing activities by opening schools. No sooner had he started his work
than some orthodox Hindu Meitei leaders began to suspect that Pettigrew’s
preaching was a deliberate attempt to impose upon them (Meiteis) the
‘government’s (British) religion.’ On return to Imphal from his furlough in
1895, Lt.Col.H.St.P.Maxwell soon met with Hindu Meitei leaders who demanded
that William Pettigrew be sent away from Manipur immediately. Fearing that
trouble might arise if William Pettigrew was allowed to continue his
proselytizing work, the school was taken out of his hand and brought under the
management of the state government. Propagation of Christianity among the
Meiteis was also prohibited forthwith.
Given
a choice between political stability and Christian proselytism, the colonial
officials definitely preferred political stability; but in hill areas where missionary
work was likely to sustain colonial rule, the colonial officials spared no
pains to find any suitable place for the missionary. According to F.S.Downs, a
church historian and American missionary, there are two traditions as to where
William Pettigrew had to start his new mission station. The first or the southern
tradition proposed Senvon, a Hmar village near Tipaimukh in South West Manipur;
but it is said that permission was denied to Pettigrew by the chief of the
village. As per the second tradition, Pettigrew went to a Mao village at
Songsong on the Imphal-Dimapur road in North Manipur and tried to buy land from
one government interpreter. But a meeting of sixteen village chiefs of Mao
tribe intervened and stopped the selling of the land saying that they did not
like the new religion.
Out
of desperation, William Pettigrew finally left Imphal on 7 January, 1895 in his
continued search for a suitable place to establish his mission station in the
Ukhrul areas of East Manipur. After touring all these places like Hundung,
Khangkhui, Paoyi, Shiroi Kashong, etc.,with Raihao, chief of Hungphun, Ukhrul,
Pettigrew felf that Hungphun was the most suitable place considering the
climate, drinking water and various other things necessary for carrying on his
work. Foretold by his father and great grand fathers about the coming of the
white missionary to Ukhrul, Raihao could not reject Pettigrew’s request for a
land and granted him enough land at the present Hungphun village. Pettigrew
thus started his work at Hungphun, Ukhrul with a new hope on 6 February,1896.
Prior to his settlement at Ukhrul, he left the Arthington Aborigines’ Mission
and joined the American Baptist Union in Assam in 1895. Accordingly, Pettigrew
was formally recognized as a Baptist missionary for Manipur and the whole hill
areas of Manipur was claimed to be the field of American Baptist Mission.
Despite William Pettigrew’s intensive and extensive evangelical itineraries in
and around Ukhrul for fourteen years, southern part of Manipur hill had still remained
beyond the reach of the new gospel till the end of 1909.
In
the mean time, on the foundation laid by J.H.Lorrain and F.W.Savidge, another
Arthington’s missionaries at Aizawl, the Welsh Calvinistic Methodist Foreign Mission
Society (WCMFMS) had been carrying on their work in Mizoram through their
missionaries, Rev.D.E.Jones and Edwin Rowlands since 1896. It was from Mizoram
that the light of the gospel came to the southern hills of Manipur through a
young man called Watkin R.Roberts, Carnaevon, Mid-Wales. Knowing not what his Lord had planned for him,
Roberts, a chemist, accompanied Dr Peter Fraser and his wife who came to Aizawl
as the first medical missionary on 14 October, 1908. Both Roberts and Dr Fraser
came from Carnaevon and also attended the same church- Castle Square
Presbyterian Church where Dr Fraser was a church elder.
There
is nothing too small for God. It was the small gift of five pounds sent to
Watkin Roberts by his lady friend Ms Emily Davies that set the evangelization
movement its initial impetus in the southern hills of Manipur. Having
prayerfully considered how the money would be used to the best advantage for
the furtherance of the gospel, Roberts decided to purchase enough bound copies
of the gospel of John in Mizo language to present one to each village chief in
Mizoram. One copy of the gospel booklet cost only eight cents. Presentation of
the gospel booklet was made to most of the village chiefs in Mizoram and even
beyond, along with a letter explaining the way of salvation through Christ,
suggesting that the recipient should read carefully the 3rd chapter,
verse 16 of St.John’s gospel and also asking each one to acknowledge receipt
and let Roberts know what was being done with the gospel sent to them. One day
one stranger perhaps from Senvawn village, Manipur happened to visit the
mission clinic at Aizawl. On being told that no missionary work was done in
that part of the region and the chief of that village could read Lushai
dialect, Roberts sent one copy of the gospel booklet through the messenger to
Senvawn. Kamkhawlun, chief of Senvawn, did receive the booklet. Taken aback and
knowing not what to do with the booklet, he sent it back to the sender with a
letter written on its back cover, “Sir, please come yourself and explain about
the book to us” through Kaikhawhrang, son of Lienhrawng, Senvawn, and his three
friends who were going to Aizawl to learn tailoring. Since the delivery of the
letter was the order of the chief, the four friends took utmost care and
Kaikhawhrang, the youngest among them was told to keep the booklet in his
shirt’s side pocket and pinned it carefully fearing that the loss of it might
land them to punishment in the form of salam
(fine).
One evening Rev
D.E.Jones, the first Welsh missionary at Aizawl, announced at a church meeting
the receipt of the gospel of St.John from Manipur with a request for a
missionary. Prima facie Roberts soon knew that it was the one he had personally
sent to Manipur, and that the request was for the sender personally to visit
the country and open up work there. It was, indeed, a Macedonian call: the call
of a land and people still in spiritual bondage and darkness! So enthused, Roberts
soon contacted Lungpau Vaiphei and Thangkhai Vaiphei who were then studying at
Aizawl under the sponsorship of Dr P.Fraser. Lungpau and Thangkhai, being from
Manipur, were well familiar with the hills and topography of the land between
Manipur and Mizoram. With some native porters, Watkin Roberts and his party
lost no time in preparing for the journey. As per the official statement made
by D.Lloyd Jones, Hon. Treasurer and Watkin R.Roberts, Hon. Secretary of the
Thado-Kuki Pioneer Mission on 20 February, 1914, Roberts and his two guides,
Lungpau and Thangkhai followed by other porters set out on their journey
towards Manipur on Monday, 31 Jaruary, 1910, and by passing through several
villages on the way reached Senvawn on Saturday, 5 February, 1910. The
following day being Sunday, Roberts and his party halted at Senvawn. Watkin
Roberts, it is said, read out his favourite Bible verse of St John 3:16- “For
God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes
in him shall not perish but have eternal life”and concluded saying, “believe in
Jesus Christ now”. On Monday, 7
February, 1910 Watkin Roberts and his party went back towards Aizawl via Vangai
range by passing through many Hmar villages within Manipur and Mizoram and at
Vervek Lungpau and Thangkhai accepted Lord Jesus Christ as their personal
Saviour. Recalling this momentous event, Watkin Roberts wrote in his letter on
7 December, 1960 on the occasion of the Golden Jubilee celebration of the
Independent Church of India thus: “Our first two converts from South West
Manipur were my beloved Thangkhai and Lungpau (both Vaiphei). I well remembered
the place where they accepted
the Lord in a house in one of the Hmar villages in Lushai Hills as we returned
to Aizawl in February, 1910 after my visit to Senvawn and the surrounding
villages”.
The
pioneer missionaries were convinced that without education, the new faith would
not be able to take deep root. They considered the three R’s as the most
effective means for winning converts and also for enabling the converts to
learn the basic tenets of the Christian faith. According to them, educational
institutions served two double purposes: first as a means of teaching the
Christian truth, and secondly, as a means for recruitment or training of future
native workers. Therefore soon after reaching Aizawl, Watkin Roberts deputed three
newly Mizo converts - Savawma, Thangchhingpuia and Vanzika to start a school at
Senvawn on 7 May,1910.
Since
then, the new faith spread like wild fire starting from Senvawn and in no time
the whole of South Manipur got the light of the gospel mainly through the new
converts. The people were receptive to the new faith because it came to them as
light to the dark. It set them free from their burdensome taboos and
superstitions associated with their animism. The new faith preached economic,
social and spiritual salvation. Within so short a time, all the tribes and
communities in the region were turned from darkness to light and had become one
of the most progressive tribes of North East India.
How
could all this happen? As we have stated before, It started with a humble but
prayerful gift from Roberts’ lady friend from Carnaevon. It was indeed an
imperishable monumental work for the glory of the Lord. Roberts was simply an
instrument and the lady spoke indirectly from her home in Wales to the hungry
souls living thousands and thousands of miles away. Is it not wonderful? Paul
planted, Apollos watered and God gave the increase so that both he that planted
and he that watered are one (I Cor.3:6). The darkness of centuries passed away,
and a new dawn of hope and love glowed brightly over the hills and mountains of
Manipur. The churches grew and flourished in the best tradition of apostolic
times - self-supporting, self-governing and self-propagating. This was the
secret of the success of the missionary movement in this part of the world.
The
apostle Paul has said that the gospel is ‘the power of God unto salvation to
every one that believes’ (Rom. 1:16). It was not British imperialism nor
western civilization which changed the people. It was the gospel which conquered
the unconquerable. It was the power of the gospel of Christ which marvelously
transformed the ignorant into enlightened ones. What a victory! For revenge,
the missionaries taught forgiveness; for hatred, love and for cruelty,
kindness. Filled with the love of Christ, the missionaries devoted their entire
lives at tremendous personal sacrifice to service among the people. For the
sake of the cross, some missionaries laid down their lives and were buried in
our country. It was the blood of those who died and the dedicated services of
those who are still alive which united the distant hills of Manipur with the
Christian world. More important, it is the precious blood of Jesus Christ which
made us one - yes, we all are one in Christ Jesus.
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