- Kartanoism
Kartanoism was a Christian movement in the
1920s through the1950s inFinland , mostly in theSatakunta region. The main centres of influence wereHuittinen andVampula , which were considered the "mother parishes" of the movement, but Kartanoism was also present in at leastKangasniemi ,Lavia ,Sippola andJuupajoki . The leaders of the movement were Alma Maria Kartano (1885-1953) and the "sleeping preacher" Amanda Matilda "Tilda" Reunanen (1894-1965). At first, they led the movement together, but later their paths separated because of personal arguments.The movement was most famous for its child preachers. These child preachers, trained in secret, numbered around ten. At its largest, the movement had around one hundred members, but its societies all over Finland gathered large crowds, even over one thousand. As well as the child preachers, the movement was known for Tilda Reunanen's spirited sermons.
Alma Kartano, the founder of the movement, had studied in the
Sortavala deaconess academy, but she never graduated as adeaconess . After this, she took a one-year travelling school teacher course in theHämeenlinna teachers' seminar. She stayed inInkerinmaa for long times, where the local preacher Voldemar Kurki introduced her to theRussia n skopt - "castrater" and hlyst - "spanker" communities. Becoming acquintated with these movements convinced Kartano that all kinds ofsexuality were evil, even when inmarriage .The sermons of Kartanoism were best known for significant coverage of waiting for the end of the world. The second coming of
Jesus was thought to be coming immediately, and before it, the sinful world would receive its punishment. TheWinter War provided a good reason to declare that the Wrath of God would be wrought upon the infidels. The Kartanoists themselves thought they had founded a bridal parish for the end of times, which Jesus would embrace as his own when he came. On the other hand, Kartanoism did not try to organise itself to a separate community, instead its members stayed within theLutheran church.Kartanoist life was strictly asceticist, including most of all total sexual abstinence, even in marriage. Women were forced to wear dark-coloured clothes, cover their heads in scarves and dress in long dresses, to avoid rousing sexual urges in men. Children were raised severely, even cruelly. The movement held prayer and sermon meetings, which could last well into the night. They included long kneeling prayers, preferably with the face pressed into the floor, and praying in such a loud voice "that the devil would flee away". The prayer meetings would often end in ecstatic experiences, where participants banged their heads and hands on the floor, shouted and wailed, had visions, spoke in tongues and prophetised.
Kartanoism received negative publicity already in the 1930s because of a certain trial, and in 1938 writer
Eino Hosia from Satakunta published a novel called "Tulipunaiset ratsastajat" ("The scarlet riders"), criticising the movement. After this, the movement received negative publicity in various other contexts as well. After Alma Kartano's death, the movement faded away. Nowadays, the Kartanoists number very few, and they are usually integrated into the local Lutheran parishes.Literature
* Eino Hosia: "Tulipunaiset ratsastajat", novel, 1938.
* "Kartanolaisuus. Sadismia ja perverssiä sukupuolielämää Jumalan nimen varjolla." Additional printing of "Lalli" magazine, 1950.
* Saara Beckman: "Tiesivätkö he mitä tekivät?", self-published, 1999.External links
* [http://www.immi.se/kultur/tikkanen/kirja34.htm Tiesivätkö he mitä tekivät? / Visste de vad de gjorde?]
* [http://k.ellila.vuodatus.net/blog/21839 Lumoava hirviö]
* [http://artikkelihaku.kansallisbiografia.fi/artikkeli/5682/ Kartano, Alma (1885-1953)] Helsinki: Biography center, Finnish Literature Society. Accessed 2008-07-05.ources
* [http://www.satakunnankansa.fi/teema/kartanolaisuus/ Satakunnan Kansa Sunday 20 November 2005]
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