Greeks are the descendants of the migrants from the Balkan Peninsula who came to Russia partly in the eighteenth century but mostly in the nineteenth century. This migration was the result of the political situation in the Balkans and the Russian-Turkish wars, leading to considerable movement of the population. The Christian population, oppressed and mercilessly robbed by the government of the Ottoman empire, saw in Russia their liberator from the centuries-old Turkish oppression. They left their homes and followed the Russian army in masses.
In the Russian-Turkish War of 1768-1774, the Greek rebels from Greece fought on the Russian side, and after the war, a considerable part of them settled in Crimea. By the beginning of the nineteenth century, the Greek settlements had lost their military importance. The Greeks who lived in the steppe districts in the Crimea and on the coast used the Tatar language (they were called Greeks-Tatars). The other part, which lived in the mountain regions, preserved their own language, which was a dialect of the modern Greek language. This group was called "Greeks-Hellens."
There is a Greek diaspora in many countries, including a small number in Cameroon. 1858 was the year when the first Greeks came to Cameroon. They settled in the capital city of Yaounde and the port city of Douala. The Greeks often owned plantations where they hired local workers.
The Greek community in Cameroon is small. The Orthodox Church provides the key cultural and social glue for Greeks.
Their religion is Greek Orthodox.
They are religious but lack understanding of the gospel and why they need a close relationship with the living God. They usually put their faith in a religious institution or ethnicity.
Pray for the Lord to raise up and thrust out Greek disciples who will make more disciples in Cameroon.
Pray for Cameroon s Greek community to hunger for spiritual meat and find it in Jesus Christ.
Scripture Prayers for the Greek in Cameroon.
https://greeksofafrica.blogspot.com/2020/10/the-greeks-in-burundi-in-1930s.html
https://clever-geek.imtqy.com/articles/1063778/index.html
Profile Source: Joshua Project |