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Report. República del Perú PERU. University Bible Fellowship – Washington Chapter 10th Anniversary Celebration November 8, 2002 Presented by Belssi Chang. Content. PERU. Geographic Setting Regions Population Ethnic Groups History and Government Universities Missionary Work.
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Report República del PerúPERU University Bible Fellowship – Washington Chapter 10th Anniversary Celebration November 8, 2002 Presented by Belssi Chang
Content PERU • Geographic Setting • Regions • Population • Ethnic Groups • History and Government • Universities • Missionary Work
Geographic Setting PERU • Borders Chile, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and the Pacific Ocean. • Total land area of 1.28 million sq. km. (3.5x size of Japan, slightly smaller than Alaska). • Third-largest country in South America after Brazil and Argentina. • Ranks among the world's 20 largest nations.
Geographic SettingContinued PERU • Terrain: western coastal plain, high and rugged Andes in center, eastern lowland jungle of Amazon Basin. • Landscape: 50 mountains > 6,000 meters above sea level; 1,679 glaciers; 12,000 lakes of varying sizes and depths; and 262 different river basins. • Among the 5 countries with the greatest biological diversity in the world.
Regions PERU • Peru is made up of 24 departments and one Constitutional Province called El Callao. • Main cities: • Coast: Arequipa, Callao, Trujillo, Chimbote, Chiclayo and Piura • Andes: Cusco • Amazon: Iquitos
Population PERU • Current total Peruvian population is about 27 million: • 52% lives in the coast, • 36% lives in the highlands, and • 12% lives in the jungle. • 71% lives in urban areas and • 29% lives in rural areas . • 50% (approx.) is under 21. • 90% is Roman Catholic. • Around 6 million live in the capital, Lima.
Ethnic Groups PERU • Ethnic Groups: • 45% Amerindian: Quechuas and Aymaras • 37% mestizo (mixed Amerindian and white), • 15% criollo (white), • 3% Black, Japanese, Chinese, and other • Languages: • Spanish (official) • Quechua (official) • Aymara
History and Government PERU • Ancient Peru seat of several prominent Andean civilizations, most notably the Incas • Inca empire captured by Spanish conquerors in 1533. • Peruvian independence declared in 1821. • 20th century dominated by military rule, serious economic problems, and guerrilla activity. • Dramatic turnaround and significant progress following • Return of democracy returned in 1980 and especially following • President Alberto FUJIMORI's election in 1990 • New Constitution issued under his leadership in 1993; left power in 2000) • Government has 3 branches: executive (5-year term), legislative, and judicial branches. • Current President: Alejandro Toledo (elected in 2001)
Universities PERU • Total of 78 Universities: ~416,000 students • 33 Public Universities: ~246,000 students • 45 Private Universities: ~170,000 students • 53% Male, 47% Female • 1.62% of total population • 7.92% of 15-24 year old population • Major with highest enrollment: Education • Largest Universities (both located in Lima): • Universidad San Martin de Porres (private): ~32,000 • Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos: ~25,000
Universities Continued PERU • Universidad San Martin de Porres: • Largest Peruvian university • ~32,000 students • Founded in 1962 • Ranked among top 3 private universities www.usmp.edu.pe
Universities Continued PERU • Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos: • ~25,000 students • Founded in 1551 by Dominican Mission. • First university in American continent. • School of medicine, law, and letters and sciences have functioned uninterruptedly since its founding. www.unmsm.edu.pe
Missionary Work PERU Periods: • 1532-1822 (Roman Catholic Missions) • 1822-1900 (Beginning of Protestant Missions) • 1900-1940s (Protestant Missions Added) • 1950s-Present (Growth Trends and Outlook)
Mission Work: 1532-1822 PERU • Roman Catholic Missions • Catholicism was brought by Spanish conquerors starting around 1532. • Evangelization conducted through Franciscan, Mercedarian, and Dominican dioceses. • The 17th century - "Peru’s religious century" • Canonization of two saints. • However 17th Century followed by religious decline.
Mission Work: 1822-1900 PERU • Beginning of Protestant Missions • 1822-24: Scottish educator/Bible society agent James Thomson arrived in Lima • Carried mission work jointly with pro-reform Catholic clergy • 1845: Catholicism becomes official state religion • Foreigners allowed to conduct Protestant services provided that no Peruvians attended • 1849: Anglican Church for foreign residents allowed • First Non-Catholic denomination in Peru.
Mission Work: 1822-1900Continued PERU • Beginning of Protestant Missions Continued • 1877: Arrival of first US Methodists (little success) • 1888: Arrival of Francisco Penzotti, Methodist Minister • 1888-1896: sold Bibles, preached, trained leaders • 1889: organized a Methodist Church • 1890-1891: jailed for 9 months due to Catholic reaction • international scandal and support resulting in religious tolerance law in 1915 • 1898: Seventh Day Adventists started mission work • Gained converts especially among Aymara Indians • Founded and operate respected university. • Remain second largest Protestant church in Peru. • Currently largest non-Pentecostal denomination.
Mission Work: 1900-1940s PERU • Protestant Missions Added • 1903: Wesleyans • 1914: Nazarenes • 1927: Baptists (first of several Baptist Missions) • 1900-1930: John Ritchie (RBMU) developed successfully an indigenous Peruvian Evangelical Church in Andes. • 1930s-1940s: John A. Mackay (Free Church of Scotland) evangelized university students in Lima • 1940: Most Protestant churches and missions form National Evangelical Council • As of 1998 still most representative Protestant Institution.
Mission Work: 1950s-Present PERU • Growth Trends and Outlook • Wycliffe Bible Translators made Bible available in >30 tribal languages in Amazonian jungle. • Faith Missions and Southern Baptists little growth. • Pentecostal churches largest growth (esp. among poor). • Evangelical Alliance Mission Radio station influential in opening doors for significant growth in 1970s.
Mission Work: 1950s-PresentContinued PERU • Growth Trends and OutlookContinued • 1970-1990 violent political climate between military and Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) guerrillas affected isolated areas where missionary efforts had been successful. • 1990s – wave of Pentencostal renewal spread • Recently – significant evangelical growth among native Quechuas and Aymaras • Many converts become active as lay missionaries, in North Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and the United States.
GodhashopeforPeru! PERU
References PERU • http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/pe.html • http://www.peru.com/peruinfo/ • http://www.latin-focus.com/countries/peru/peru.htm • http://ppn.home.cern.ch/ppn/up.htm • http://www.anr.edu.pe/ • http://www.unmsm.edu.pe • http://www.usmp.edu.pe • D.B. Barret, et al. World Christian Encyclopedia: The World by Countries, Religions, Churches, Ministries. Volume 1, Second Edition. Oxford University Press, 2001. • A. S. Moreau, et al. Evangelical Dictionary of World Missions. Baker Book House Company, 2000. • J. A. Siewert, et al. Mission Handbook: USA/Canada Christian Ministries Overseas. Marc Publishers, 1993-1995.