Hodological care among Ghanaian Pentecostals: de-diasporization and belonging in transnational religious networks

TitleHodological care among Ghanaian Pentecostals: de-diasporization and belonging in transnational religious networks
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsK. Krause
Secondary TitleDiaspora: a journal of transnational studies
Volume19
Issue1
Pagination97 - 115
Date Published2016///
Publication Languageeng
ISSN Number1044-2057
KeywordsGhana, migration, Pentecostalism
Abstract

The nexus between Pentecostalism and migration has been studied extensively and in divergent terms. One line of research has looked at churches founded by migrants as home away from home, helping migrants to settle in a new place and at the same time connecting them back to where they came from. Another strand has rather highlighted incorporation into a global Christendom and engagement in global spiritual warfare. Whereas the first line of research is often phrased in terms of diaspora and religion, the second one views Pentecostalism as producing globality on its own terms. With this article, we attempt to contribute to this discussion by asking how deterritorialized belonging is produced in daily Pentecostal practices. What is made present when a home is made absent? What kind of attentive practices create the presence of the Holy Spirit? In thinking with the notion of hodological care, we argue that Pentecostal churches founded by Ghanaian migrants in Southern Africa and Europe create belonging not to a “home" but to connections. They thereby produce forms of de-diasporization, which could be seen as belonging through disconnecting.

Citation Key8602