The Missionaries is a searing examination of attempts by North American fundamentalist Christian missionaries to convert indigenous tribes around the globe. In a distillation of a lifetime's observation on the ground, Norman Lewis contrasts the self-contained, peaceful traditions of the tribal peoples he so admires with the violence, the ruthless double-standards and the greed of the men and women who seek to convert them. Lewis's description leaves the reader devastated by man's capacity for cruelty and with no doubt as to which of the two - missionaries or tribespeople - has developed the more admirable culture. It was Lewis's writing on this subject that led to the birth of Survival International, which seeks to counter his gloomy prediction that 'in another thirty years no trace of aboriginal life anywhere in the world will have survived'.
A Goddess in the Stones : Travels in India
Norman Lewis
bookIn Sicily
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bookThe Tomb in Seville
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bookAn Empire of the East : Travels in Indonesia
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bookThe Missionaries : God against the Indians
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bookJackdaw Cake : An Autobiography
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bookVoices of the Old Sea
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bookHonoured Society : The Sicilian Mafia observed
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bookView of the World : Selected Journalism
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bookNaples '44 : An intelligence officer in the Italian labyrinth
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bookGolden Earth : Travels in Burma
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bookDragon Apparent : Travels in Cambodia, Laos & Vietnam
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