The Foreign Mission Committee of the Church of Scotland sent him in 1881 to revive the agging Blantyre mission, which had been wracked by violent scandal and depleted by staff resignations and the dismissal of its leader, Rev. Duff Macdonald.[3] Upon arriving at Blantyre, Scott set to work repairing relationships with local chiefs that had been damaged in preceding years by the deleterious conduct of the mission staff. Under his supervision, the mission strongly promoted the Presbyterian ideal of mission as education, and schools for boys and girls would in time raise many of the future indigenous leaders of colonial and postcolonial Malawi.[4] Evangelism was also a priority, and churches were planted in proximity to Blantyre and further a eld: Mulanje, Domasi and Zomba, and Ngoniland.[5] The Blantyre mission also developed as an industrial mission under Scott’s tutelage, where converts could learn the sort of practical skills that Scott and his colleagues believed would incorporate them into the wider economic and social world of the British empire.
Contents contributed and discussions participated by keciatshebwa
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Kindly note that I uploaded 5 bookmarks of requested sources first then I annotated later as my Diigo was giving me an issue with sharing previously annotated pdfs so the only alternative I had was to start over and do the annotations again.