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Ludwig Ingwer Nommensen

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Ludwig Ingwer Nommensen was born in 1834 in Schleswig-Holstein (a district long disputed between Denmark and Germany, and at that time Danish).

In 1857 he began training for missionary work, and in 1862 he went as a Lutheran missionary to Sumatra, where he worked in the interior among the Bataks, a people previously untouched by either Islam or Christianity. (Note that Islam is widespread in Indonesia and has outposts as far east as The Philippines.)

After some initial troubles, the mission began to succeed, with the conversion of several tribal chiefs and their followers. By 1876 there were 2000 Batak Christians. Nommensen translated the New Testament into Batak by 1878. He undertook to preach the Gospel without replacing the native culture by a European one, and to develop native Church leaders and a native order of worship.

Nommensen died on 23 May 1918. The Christian community he had planted grew and prospered. With the coming of World War II, the missionaries were driven out or imprisoned, and the Batak people took over completely the management of their own church, which now the largest Christian Congregation in Indonesia.