The Scotsman

Missionary Slessor

From impoverish­ed mill worker to African icon rescuing babies

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Mary Slessor, born 2 December 1848, Aberdeen. Died 13 January, 1915, Nigeria

BORN the second of seven children to a workingcla­ss Dundonian family in 1848, Mary Slessor was expected to graft hard and die young in one of the city’s many jute mills.

Instead, she chose to venture to Africa where she worked tirelessly to save the lives of countless numbers of children. Mary Slessor came from an impoverish­ed background. Originally from Aberdeen, her family moved to Dundee when she was aged 10 in search for work. The young Mary was never destined for an easy life. For much of her childhood she was a ‘half-timer’, spending half her time working at the mill and the other half at school – her studies were paid for by the company. Inspired by the work of David Livingston­e, Mary decided that she would like to follow in the great man’s footsteps.

Mary arrived as a missionary in Ethiopia in August 1876. Upon moving to the Nigerian town of Calabar, she encountere­d the local tribes and was shocked at their archaic and often brutal traditions – particular­ly an old superstiti­on involving the abandonmen­t of new-born twins.

Natives believed that the birth of twins was a sign that a curse had been cast and that the body of one of the two children must contain an evil spirit. Since it was impossible to tell which baby harboured the demon, both would be left to perish in the bush. Mary was horrified by this practice and spent much of the next 40 years rescuing babies abandoned by their mothers. Against the advice of her mission society, nine twins were adopted by Slessor, known as Ma’ to the children.

A letter from one of her adopted sons Dan, held by the Mary Slessor Foundation, based in Dundee, makes clear the level of love and care she afforded the young ones. It said: “Ma was the ideal mother, with us she was not the mistress or the missionary worker, she was our mother and the home our family.”

She also took great interest in solving tribal disagreeme­nts and would encourage chiefs of warring tribes to sit with her under a shaded tree and sort out their difference­s in an amicable fashion. Author Isabel Watkins describes Mary’s impact: “She was just an amazing lady. She suffered a tough upbringing, and had to endure the deaths of both her elder brothers and her father. Perhaps this is what gave her such strength as a diplomat and why she was able to stand up so fiercely against male leaders to the extent that she won their respect and adulation.”

Slessor was the only active missionary working in the remote Calabar region. She eventually ventured deep into the jungle to settle with the Okoyong tribe in their own territorie­s. Slessor was unique in that she became the first white visitor to gain full acceptance there. The chief granted her permission to own land and to construct a school.

Slessor died in 1915. She was given a state funeral and is buried at the Eyamba Street Cemetery in Duke Town. Her likeness has appeared on Clydesdale Bank £10 notes.

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