通过曾我的黑人灵歌思考非洲:神学思考

Sandiswa L. Kobe
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摘要

本文对蒂约-索加(Tiyo Soga)所作并记录在南部非洲卫理公会(MCSA)赞美诗集中的 Lizal'isidinga laKho(赞美诗 116)和 Wazidala iinto zonke(赞美诗 16)进行了批判性反思。从黑人解放神学(BTL)的角度出发,我对赞美诗 116 和赞美诗 16 进行了历史化和背景化处理,以驳斥关于蒂约-索加与其人民的生活、苦难经历和痛苦格格不入的论点。文章认为,赞美诗 116 和赞美诗 16 是黑人灵歌,表达了索加作为黑人在边境战争时期的生活背景。因此,我将黑人性作为一种启发式方法,认为这两首歌不仅将黑人在边境战争时期的经历历史化,而且是索加的祈祷和/或哀歌,祈求上帝在一个试图摧毁黑人的存在、历史和文化的世界中,饶恕黑人的生命、文化和价值体系。这些歌曲强调黑人争取正义和解放的斗争,鼓励黑人永远不要屈服于那些企图摧毁黑人人格的人给他们下的定义。文章将索加置于边疆战争之中,以说明他作为黑人的亲身经历,然后研究并介绍了《Lizal'isidinga laKho》和《Wazidala iinto zonke》这两首诞生于战争年代的黑人灵歌,为那些在不公正的殖民战争中被征服和奴役的人们带来希望。赞美诗第 116 首和第 16 首强调黑人争取解放和正义的斗争,因而有助于非殖民主义转向的论述--不考虑西方:本文的贡献在于它关注宗教研究、社会科学和人文学科的交叉如何产生跨学科的有争议的话语。
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Thinking Africa through Soga’s black spirituals: A theological reflection
This article offers a critical reflection of Lizal’isidinga laKho (hymn 116) and Wazidala iinto zonke (hymn 16) written by Tiyo Soga and recorded in the Methodist Church of Southern Africa (MCSA) hymnal book. From the perspective of black theology of liberation (BTL), I historicise and contextualise hymn 116 and hymn 16 to debunk the argument that Tiyo Soga was alien to the lives, experiences of suffering and pain of his people. The article posits that hymn 116 and hymn 16 are black spirituals that articulate the contexts Soga found himself as a black person during the times of the frontier wars. Therefore, utilising blackness as a heuristic approach, I argue that the songs do not just historicise the experiences of black people in the times of the frontier wars, but they are prayers and/or laments from Soga that ask God to spare the lives, the culture, and value systems of black people in a world that seeks the destruction of their being, history, and culture. The songs emphasise the black struggle for justice and liberation encouraging black people never to succumb to the definitions given to them by those who seek the destruction of black personhood. The article locates Soga within the frontier wars to illustrate his own experiences as black person, then examines and presents Lizal’isidinga laKho, Wazidala iinto zonke as black spirituals born in a time of war to give hope to those who have been conquered and subjugated in the unjust wars of colonisation. Hymns 116 and 16 contribute to the decolonial turn discourse –unthinking of the west – because they emphasise the black struggle for liberation and justice.Contribution: The contribution of this article is its focus on the way in which the intersection of religious studies, social sciences, and humanities generates an interdisciplinary contested discourse.
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