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273 pages, Hardcover
Published August 31, 2021
In fact, the history of missionary activity in China is inextricable from the commercial activities of the colonial powers. The Qing administration expressly prohibited Christian missionaries from entering their lands. But, of course, just as the opium ban didn’t stop merchants, this didn’t stop the missionaries. They simply joined trading companies as employees and entered the empire under that guise…For many missionaries, the opening of trade was integral to the spread of religion…Chinese restrictions on trade went against the will of God who wanted all countries of the world to share their wealth with each other. This acted as a neat justification for him to use the full extent of his powers to aid the colonial project.Whereas this is an scholarly review of the opium trade, Amitav Ghosh's Ibis Trilogy Sea of PoppiesRiver of SmokeFlood of Fire gives a wonderfully graphic and in-depth account of this whole sordid affair. The author pays a glowing tribute to the trilogy. It is chilling to learn of the way tea, chocolate, coffee, sugar, and opium were interlinked with each other and depended on slavery – slaves from Africa, China and India!