India summit ensures Manual’s rapid translation into 10 languages
Twenty-four participants representing 10 different language groups from India gathered 25-29 June in Bangalore, India, for a Manual Translation Summit to work together on translating the Church of the Nazarene denomination’s identity document, the Manual.
Although the Church of the Nazarene in India has existed since 1898, almost 120 years later most of the district superintendents and pastors across India have used the English version of the Manual.
Amendments to the Manual are proposed and voted on by delegates to the global denomination’s General Assembly every four years. The last assembly was held in June 2017. However, typically translations of all the amendments to the Manual can take years to be made by translation committees globally. Many languages spoken by Nazarenes never receive a translation.
Maharashtra was blessed to have the Manual translated in Marathi for the first time in 1958 and then received its next version in Marathi in 1989. From then on, it has received excerpts in smaller forms, but not the whole copy. The other language widely spoken in India that routinely receives a translation is Hindi, into which it was translated recently. But India is a multi-lingual country with 15 districts in existence and the denomination is growing across India. The need is to have the Manual in all the languages.
With the recent success of the Eurasia Region’s first Manual Translation Summit in Portugal in November 2017, a second summit was planned for Bangalore, India.
India Field Strategy Coordinator Sunil Dandge organized the group, which represented the languages of Bengali, Marathi, Hindi, Telugu, Thadou, Kannada, Tamil, Malayalam, Oriya, and Punjabi.
The Manual Translation Summits are a new way the denomination is working to more rapidly produce translations of the Manual.
“Never before were translations of the Manual of the Church of the Nazarene completed as soon after a General Assembly as in this cycle; never before could constitutional changes be voted on in district assemblies as early as in this cycle,” said Nikolaj Sawatzky, Eurasia Region literature coordinator.
General Secretary David Wilson, Global Nazarene Publications Director Scott Stargel, and Sawatzky realized that if growth is to be sustained according to the Nazarene denomination’s holiness doctrine, then the Manual needs to be in the hands of every pastor in every language of India and South Asia.
On the summit’s final day, almost all the language groups finished translating the denomination’s 16 Articles of Faith, Agreed Statement of Belief, as well as lexicon terms. Some of them even uploaded all the terms to the online lexicon and others are working toward uploading them.
The presence and involvement of the former South Asia literature coordinator, "Rev. Santosh," was appreciated.
"It is an honor to be able to serve the church in this capacity and produce some material," Santosh said. "Though I am retired, I am still available for any help in regards to literature and education. That is where my heart is."
Sawatzky said a summit highlight was the presence of a whole new language group on the field — the Malayalam people.
"They represent a new work of our church in India and therefore they do not have a single document or resource translated in their language yet," he said. "It was exciting to see how they eagerly were translating the Articles of Faith for the first time in their language.”
On the last day, all of the participants assured their commitment to the complete translation of the Manual. Soon, an entire Manual in all the major languages of India and South Asia will be available.