[Dialogue] Katanga cross in museums
FacilitationFla at aol.com
FacilitationFla at aol.com
Fri Oct 19 17:56:09 EDT 2007
About 10 years ago while Bob and I were visiting (Philadelphia? of OK City,
we can't remember) we stopped into a Treasury Buidling which had a museum on
the first floor. They had a display of the history of currency with
samplings from around the world -- and lo and behold at least 1 Congolese" cross
as a sample of money used in that time. That was quite a surprise for us.
Now I see others have also seen them in musees
Cynthia
In a message dated 10/18/2007 8:08:11 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
bergdall at rcn.com writes:
At 18/10/2007, John Cock wrote:
>>this link http://mcclungmuseum.utk.edu/objectmo/ob-9802.htm
>>works fine for me.
I have used this link for years: it is the best summary that I have come
across about the "Congelese" cross (as it was called when I first heard about it
in the Order). Here is what Fred Buss -- before he apparently became
displaced(!)-- wrote about it in March 2007 (see
http://twiki.wedgeblade.net/bin/view.cgi/Main/OrderHistory
>>The Congolese cross was nailed to the Westside wall
>>in 1964. JWM felt the Congolese cross, symbolic of 1.
>>Cruciform shape, 2 International, 3 developing world,
>>4. As money, the transfiguration of the secular into
>>the religious as a demand on the 20th century church’s
>>mission. The cross was the form of exchange (money)
>>and made of solid copper.
I heard the basics of this same history in 1968 when I first visited the
Ecumenical Institute. After I was assigned to Africa in 1984, I asked Lyn
Mathews to elaborate on the story. She told me that Joe was given an antique cross
at Victoria Falls during his first research trip to Africa. She said he liked
that fact that it came from a non-western culture. Lyn also confirmed that
this same cross was used to symbolize the covenant of the Order shortly after
their departure from the Faith and Life Community in Austin. Lyn told me,
however, that the original cross from Victoria Falls had somehow vanished. If I
ever came across another one in Africa, she told me that she would be most
grateful if I would obtained it for her.
This is the kind of quest I enjoy. Little by little, I pieced together their
African history (which has since been confirmed in the link above from they
McClung Museum): they are copper ingots that were used as a primitive form of
currency in pre-colonial Africa. They primarily originated from the Katanga
region (thus some refer to them by that name). Today, this is where the
southeast tail of the Congo spears into the middle of Zambia -- an odd border
negotiated by European colonial powers due to huge copper deposits.
In the mid-1990s I finally stumbled across some of these antique copper
ingots in an open-air market in Lusaka. At the time I felt it was almost as if I
had found the Holy Grail! I bought four and gave one to Lyn in Dallas during
the January 1996 conference of the International Association of Facilitators
(IAF). That was the last time I saw her.
That brought my long and interesting search in Africa for an original
"Congelese" cross to a successful end. What it symbolizes, however, (i.e.,
embodying a new religious mode in a secular time), remains an active pursuit.
Terry
Cynthia N. Vance, M. A.
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