This deeply insightful ethnography explores the healing power of caring and intimacy in a small, closely bonded Apostolic congregation during Botswanas HIV/AIDS pandemic.Death in a Church of Lifepaints a vivid picture of how members of the Baitshepi Church make strenuous efforts to sustain loving relationships amid widespread illness and death. Over the course of long-term fieldwork, Frederick Klaits discovered Baitshepis distinctly maternal ethos and the spiritual kinship embodied in the churchs nurturing fellowship practice. Klaits shows that for Baitshepi members, Christian faith is a form of moral passion that counters practices of divination and witchcraft with redemptive hymn singing, prayer, and the use of therapeutic substances. An online audio annex makes available examples of the church members preaching and song.
Frederick Klaits, a cultural anthropologist, teaches in the Thompson Writing Program at Duke University.
Klaits' work is not only a major contribution to the anthropology of religion and the social scientific literature on AIDS, but also a significant intervention into debates on how Africanists should approach their understandings of sociality and relatedness. Matthew Engelke, author ofA Problem of Presence: Beyond Scripture in an African Church
The reader gets the sense of being a welcome party to a close conversation. Klaits sustains a direct, clear, humane, and jargon-free voice, and we come away with a radically challenged understanding of what it means in an African church to be 'born anew'. Richard Werbner, author ofTears of the Dead: The Social Biography of an African Family
This book is a valuable contribution to the study of HIV/AIDS. . . I would highly recommend it to anyone.
This [book] will provoke new, creative, and sustainable ways of designing and implementing AIDS prevention and treatment policies.
The [book] is richlÓ?