Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway
Social reconciliation has received much attention in Christian churches since the late 1980s. Both the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway initiated reconciliation processes with the Saami (also “Sami” or “Sámi”), the indigenous people of Northern Europe, at the beginning of the 1990s. As form...
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doaj-810e469217bb41959073633b386b37e42020-11-25T03:47:52ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442020-07-011134334310.3390/rel11070343Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of NorwayHelga Sofia West0Faculty of Theology, University of Helsinki, 00014 Helsinki, FinlandSocial reconciliation has received much attention in Christian churches since the late 1980s. Both the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway initiated reconciliation processes with the Saami (also “Sami” or “Sámi”), the indigenous people of Northern Europe, at the beginning of the 1990s. As former state churches, they bear the colonial burden of having converted the Saami to Lutheranism. To make amends for their excesses in the missionary field, both Scandinavian churches have aimed at structural changes to include Saaminess in their church identities. In this article, I examine how the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway understand reconciliation in relation to the Saami in their own church documents using conceptual analysis. I argue that the Church of Sweden treats reconciliation primarily as a secular concept without binding it to the doctrine of reconciliation, making the Church’s agenda theologically weak, whereas the Church of Norway utilizes Christian resources in its comprehensive approach to reconciliation with the Saami. This article shows both the challenges and contributions of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway to the hotly debated discussions on truth and reconciliation in the Nordic Saami context.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/7/343colonialismChristianityinstitutional reconciliationjusticeSaami peopleChurch of Norway |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Helga Sofia West |
spellingShingle |
Helga Sofia West Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway Religions colonialism Christianity institutional reconciliation justice Saami people Church of Norway |
author_facet |
Helga Sofia West |
author_sort |
Helga Sofia West |
title |
Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway |
title_short |
Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway |
title_full |
Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway |
title_fullStr |
Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway |
title_full_unstemmed |
Renegotiating Relations, Structuring Justice: Institutional Reconciliation with the Saami in the 1990–2020 Reconciliation Processes of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway |
title_sort |
renegotiating relations, structuring justice: institutional reconciliation with the saami in the 1990–2020 reconciliation processes of the church of sweden and the church of norway |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Religions |
issn |
2077-1444 |
publishDate |
2020-07-01 |
description |
Social reconciliation has received much attention in Christian churches since the late 1980s. Both the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway initiated reconciliation processes with the Saami (also “Sami” or “Sámi”), the indigenous people of Northern Europe, at the beginning of the 1990s. As former state churches, they bear the colonial burden of having converted the Saami to Lutheranism. To make amends for their excesses in the missionary field, both Scandinavian churches have aimed at structural changes to include Saaminess in their church identities. In this article, I examine how the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway understand reconciliation in relation to the Saami in their own church documents using conceptual analysis. I argue that the Church of Sweden treats reconciliation primarily as a secular concept without binding it to the doctrine of reconciliation, making the Church’s agenda theologically weak, whereas the Church of Norway utilizes Christian resources in its comprehensive approach to reconciliation with the Saami. This article shows both the challenges and contributions of the Church of Sweden and the Church of Norway to the hotly debated discussions on truth and reconciliation in the Nordic Saami context. |
topic |
colonialism Christianity institutional reconciliation justice Saami people Church of Norway |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/7/343 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT helgasofiawest renegotiatingrelationsstructuringjusticeinstitutionalreconciliationwiththesaamiinthe19902020reconciliationprocessesofthechurchofswedenandthechurchofnorway |
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