Description
Book SynopsisIllustrates how devout Haitian Protestant migrants use their religious identities to ground themselves in a place that is hostile to them as migrants, and it also uncovers how their religious faith ties in to their belief in the need to "save" their homeland, as they re-imagine Haiti politically and morally as a Protestant Christian nation.
Trade ReviewDr. Bertin M. Louis Jr. has just offered to the world of intelligentsia a remarkable book on the culture of Haitian Protestantism in the Haitian diaspora of the Bahamas. It is, without a doubt, a roadmap for cultural anthropology or ethnography designed for researchers with deep insights, students, and scholars to address religious issues, not only under the lens of inquiry, but with a profound thirst for social justice. * Ethnic and Racial Studies,Clarence St. Hilaire *
My Soul is in Haitioffers much for us to seriously contemplate. * Black Theology *
[F]or bringing Haitian Protestantism to our attentionand apparently to the attention of Bahamiansand for linking religion to class, race, and transnational variables, the project is a welcome addition to the literature on Latin and Caribbean Christianity. * Anthropology Review Database *
A ground breaking study of the evangelical Protestant churches in the Haitian communities of the Bahamas, describing the ways in which these churches provide their congregations with a sense of national and transnational identity. Vital for students of diasporic and transnational studies, anthropologists, historians and sociologists of religion, this book is a comprehensive study likely to be the authoritative source on this topic for years to come. -- Leslie G. Desmangles,Trinity College
A ground-breaking study drawing on five years of transnational ethnographic research in the Bahamas, Haiti, and the United States. As a Haitian-American, Louis is cognizant of the subtleties of Haitian culture and the cultural differences between Haitians living in Haiti and Haitians living abroad. A major strength of this book is the authors keen recognition of the importance of boundary maintenance and his insights into native constructions of 'religion,' such as the distinction Haitians make between being Protestant (Pwotestan) and being Christian (Kretyen). -- Stephen D. Glazier,University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Table of ContentsContents Acknowledgments xi Pronunciation of Haitian Creole Terminology xv Introduction 1 1. Haitian Protestant Culture 19 2. Haitians in the Bahamas 47 3. Pastors, Churches, and Haitian Protestant Transnational Ties 71 4. Haitian Protestant Liturgy 95 5. "The People Who Have Not Converted Yet," 119 Protestant, and Christian Conclusion: Modernity Revisited 143 Notes 153 References 163 Index 169 About the Author 179