Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Pioneer Missionary: Domasi Days
- 3 The Right-hand Man: Scott and Hetherwick
- 4 The Mission Leader: Father Figure
- 5 The Public Figure: Critic and Campaigner
- 6 Malawi Visionary: Standing Up for Cinderella
- 7 The Linguist and Bible Translator: Words Must Be Christianised
- 8 The Mission Thinker: Priorities and Policy
- 9 The Church Leader: Imagination and Reality
- 10 Missionary and Empire Builder? Tensions and Contradictions
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Missionary and Empire Builder? Tensions and Contradictions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2025
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Pioneer Missionary: Domasi Days
- 3 The Right-hand Man: Scott and Hetherwick
- 4 The Mission Leader: Father Figure
- 5 The Public Figure: Critic and Campaigner
- 6 Malawi Visionary: Standing Up for Cinderella
- 7 The Linguist and Bible Translator: Words Must Be Christianised
- 8 The Mission Thinker: Priorities and Policy
- 9 The Church Leader: Imagination and Reality
- 10 Missionary and Empire Builder? Tensions and Contradictions
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
After Hetherwick's death a plaque was erected in his memory in his home church, the West Church of St Nicholas in Aberdeen. On it he is remembered as, ‘PIONEER MISSIONARY AND EMPIRE BUILDER’. Though he cannot be held responsible for the epithet, he might not have been entirely uncomfortable with it. At the time, Mission and Empire were widely assumed to be very closely related and Hetherwick was an exemplar. Though there was never any doubt that his missionary calling was the primary one, he had also played his part in the building of the Empire. He had campaigned successfully for the establishment of the British Protectorate in Nyasaland, and he had become one of its most prominent civic figures, serving terms on the Legislative Council, being one of the first members of Blantyre Town Council, playing a leading role in the Chamber of Commerce and developing a high profile as an activist and campaigner on a wide range of social, economic and political issues. Admittedly he was a ‘critical friend’ and often a thorn in the side of the British Administration, but he identified strongly with the British Empire, which he viewed as, on the whole, a benign influence.
From the late nineteenth century, it was widely assumed that the Christian missionary enterprise and European colonial rule were close allies, even if there might occasionally be tensions between them. When J. D. McCallum was covering for Hetherwick during his furlough in 1906 he caught the spirit of the times when he gave his assessment of Hetherwick's status:
It has been the good fortune of the Church of Scotland to have had located here one so scholarly, so practical, so capable an organiser and administrator, so whole-heartedly missionary. In the development of this land, and alike to the advantage of European and native, the Mission has played a great and honourable part, and when the history of the makers of this new portion of His Majesty's Dominions comes to be written, a very high place in it will be occupied by Dr Hetherwick.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Mission, Race and Colonialism in MalawiAlexander Hetherwick of Blantyre, pp. 159 - 188Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2023