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Pray Or Prey? Cameroon's Pentecostal Churches Face Crackdown

The Rev. Warah Solomon prays over a man at the Ramah Christian Center in Bamenda, northwest Cameroon. The country's has more than 500 Pentecostal churches like this one, which hosted nearly 5,000 worshipers on a recent Sunday.
Andres Caballero
/
NPR
The Rev. Warah Solomon prays over a man at the Ramah Christian Center in Bamenda, northwest Cameroon. The country's has more than 500 Pentecostal churches like this one, which hosted nearly 5,000 worshipers on a recent Sunday.

There's a saying in Cameroon that you can't drive for more than 100 yards without coming across a "revival church" or "new church" — terms used to refer to Pentecostal churches.

And even when you can't see them, you can probably hear them.

That's the case on a recent Sunday morning in Douala, the country's largest city, where the sound from the loudspeakers at Faith Ministry Banner church clashes with that of passing moto-taxis.

Dozens of worshipers stand under a blue overflow tent that extends from the church all the way to the sidewalk.

Inside the main room, a blind pastor, the Rev. George Nfor Asongyu, wipes the sweat from his forehead with a white towel and delivers the message to his congregation. A group of children naps near the fans.

Pastor George Nfor Asongyu delivers a sermon during a Sunday service at Ministry Faith Banner in Douala, Cameroon's largest city. The church is one of nearly 100 across the country being targeted by the government for closure.
Andres Caballero / NPR
/
NPR
Pastor George Nfor Asongyu delivers a sermon during a Sunday service at Ministry Faith Banner in Douala, Cameroon's largest city. The church is one of nearly 100 across the country being targeted by the government for closure.

But after 10 years, this could be the last Sunday service at the church.

"In a week's time from today, the government will close me down," Asongyu says.

"They say we pray too much, we disturb, we are breaking down marriages, we're destroying homes, we're exploiting people, which is not true," Asongyu says. "Even if there are churches that do that, it is not me. I know what call God has given me for this nation."

A Growing Pentecostal Church

Pentecostalism is now the fastest-growing Christian denomination in the world — and nowhere is it growing faster than in sub-Saharan Africa, home to nearly 45 percent of all Pentecostals.

In predominantly Christian Cameroon, there are more than 500 revival churches. Their rapid growth, as well as what the government views as questionable practices, has drawn attention. Last year, officials ordered the closure of nearly 100 churches that it claimed were criminal enterprises taking advantage of poor, desperate people.

"Cameroonians are faced with economic crisis, HIV/AIDS which cannot be cured, terminal illnesses," says Robert Akoko, who teaches sociology and anthropology at the University of Buea in southwest Cameroon. "And once they find themselves in such state, they see Pentecostal churches — spiritual healing, people being healed of HIV/AIDS."

It's not just faith healing that's drawing followers, says Akoko, who has studied Pentecostalism's growth in the country. The church also claims to offer protection from evil spirits.

That's what led Mary Sabi to join a Pentecostal church after more than a decade as a Catholic. She says she was being tormented by what she called a "spiritual husband."

"I couldn't sleep in the night, they always come and sex with me in the night, every night in dreams," Sabi recalls. "So it was so tormenting. I didn't know what to do."

One of her friends told her about Kings Deliverance Ministries, a Pentecostal church in Bamenda, in northwest Cameroon.

"So when I rushed there, that is how I got my deliverance," Sabi says.

The University of Buea's Akoko says that though Pentecostalism originated in America, it's been what he describes as "Africanized."

"It addresses problems faced by Africans. It addresses the beliefs of Africans as far as supernatural forces may be concerned," he says.

But it's the Pentecostal gospel of prosperity, Akoko says, that is the main draw for Cameroonians, many of whom live on less than $7 a day.

On a recent Sunday service at a Cameroonian branch of a Nigerian mega-church known as Winners' Chapel, hundreds of people listen to members testify about how God has blessed them with material riches and job promotions. One woman says she wondered why her car was more rundown than everyone else's. She says that after much prayer, God blessed her with a new car.

Are Churches Harmful?

Cameroon's minister of communication, Issa Tchiroma Bakary, says these revival churches not only disturb neighbors with loud services, they rip off vulnerable people. Some pastors, he says, engage in criminal practices such as extortion. The government decided to close them, he says, wherever their presence becomes harmful to society.

The only person who can approve a church in Cameroon is the president, Paul Biya. No church has been officially recognized since 2009, and the government began its crackdown last year.

Despite this, churches keep sprouting up.

So the government set up a commission to review the Pentecostal churches and identify ones to close. The head of the commission, the Rev. Ludovic Paulin Fotso, is a Pentecostal himself.

People flood the stage for physical and spiritual healing at Ramah Christian Center, one of the fastest-growing Pentecostal churches in Bamenda.
Andres Caballero / NPR
/
NPR
People flood the stage for physical and spiritual healing at Ramah Christian Center, one of the fastest-growing Pentecostal churches in Bamenda.

But many view the commission as the government's way of dividing the church. Fotso says that being between the state and the targeted churches is a sensitive task. Some fellow pastors look at him as if he were the police coming after them, but what he's actually trying to do, he says, is clean up and re-establish the church's leadership.

Meanwhile, the fate of churches like Asongyu's Ministry Faith Banner in Douala hangs in the balance. Like most Pentecostal churches in Cameroon, it is operating without legal permission under the government's lax regulations. (Fewer than 50 such churches are legally registered.)

In the end, police officers did visit Asongyu's church, but they seemed interested mostly in shaking him down. One of them asked the pastor for 100,000 Central African Francs — about $200 — which he didn't have. He says he managed to give them something as a token of appreciation, but it apparently wasn't enough.

"He was not pleased with the amount I gave him," Asongyu recalls. "I was trying to avoid involving myself in bribery and corruption."

The police took the money and said they were going to close the church anyway, citing Asongyu's blindness as the reason.

But more than a week later, the blind pastor is there, playing bass with the band during a rollicking service that feels more like a gospel dance party than a church.

Instead of closing the church, the government asked Asaongyu for more documents. The registration process is known to take decades. And even though his church is still open today, its future is uncertain.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Andrés Caballero
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