This study critically explores the intersection of two significant colonial forces transatlantic slavery and Christian evangelization and their lasting impact on Liberia’s religious and cultural identity. Unlike typical colonial encounters where European powers directly imposed foreign systems upon African societies, Liberia presents a unique historical case: a nation founded and governed by formerly enslaved African Americans who returned to Africa in the 19th century, under the auspices of the American Colonization Society. These repatriated individuals, often referred to as “Free Slaves,” brought with them deeply ingrained Euro-American ideologies, including Protestant Christianity, Victorian moral values, and Western social and political frameworks. Using a qualitative research approach grounded in the analysis of historical documents, missionary records, and anthropological studies, this study reveals how these settlers systematically replaced indigenous religious beliefs and cultural systems with Eurocentric alternatives. Three primary transformations are identified: first, the displacement of African Traditional Religion (ATR) through the widespread introduction of Christian cosmology and theology; second, the institutionalization of Western social structures that eroded traditional communal ethics and governance; and third, the establishment of persistent cultural hierarchies that privileged Anglo-American norms over indigenous African values. By framing Liberia’s experience as a case of reverse cultural colonization, the study illuminates a profound historical paradox those who were once victims of slavery and cultural dispossession in the Americas became, upon their return to Africa, instruments of cultural domination. The imposed “civilizing mission” not only marginalized indigenous worldviews but also replicated the very mechanisms of cultural erasure typical of European colonial regimes. This paradox challenges binary narratives of colonizer versus colonized and underscores the complexities of postcolonial identity formation. The study contributes significantly to postcolonial discourse by interrogating how emancipated populations, shaped by their experiences of displacement and assimilation, internalized and perpetuated hegemonic cultural systems in new contexts. It highlights the need for a more nuanced understanding of colonial legacies, cultural hegemony, and the dynamics of religious and cultural transformation in African societies shaped by both external and internal forces of imperialism.
Allen Paye (Wed,) studied this question.