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    Posted December 9, 2009 by
    Location
    China
    Assignment
    Assignment
    This iReport is part of an assignment:
    iReport photo club

    More from Dalian

    A Dove From Dalian: The history of Christian faith in the former capital of Manchuria

     

    China is a country of evolving cultural legacies and economic destinies. Weaved within this tapestry of modernization are the threads of Christianity and its fluctuating influence. One of the most unique examples of this Western religion takes place in a historic coastal city that has long been overshadowed.

     

    The Chinese city of Dalian has gone by many names in the past one hundred years. Each title was in preference to the language used by the colonial society or occupation force that administrated the city, from Great Britain to Russia to Japan to the Soviet Union, and then finally native China. As a military port and commercial hub, Dalian was a strategic location in three foreign wars and the national civil war.

     

    From its formal foundation in 1898, Dalian was a center for cultural exchanges. Its Christian community thrived for generations, with ties to Europe, America, and Japan. During the years of social turmoil within China, churches where closed and their congregations scattered. Yet that spiritual faith remained. These centers for worship have been restored and their congregations attract growing numbers of Chinese Christians. Dalian is also one of the few cities in China to have preserved Christian cemeteries for foreigners.

     

    A Dove From Dalian: The history of Christian faith in the former capital of Manchuria is an effort to tell a little known story of Dalian through photography, allowing the images to stand on their own as snapshots in time.

     

    In addition to rare documents, antique maps, vintage pictures, modern images, and written historical details, the book includes first-hand accounts from two former colonists. Kazuko Kuramoto is the author of Manchurian Legacy: Memoirs of a Japanese Colonist and Tatiana Erohina, grand-daughter of the priest who built the original Russian Orthodox Church in Dalian. Their religious experience and background in this city from 1927 to 1955 offers a rare insight.

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