The first BCMS missionary was 84-year-old Archdeacon A. W. Mackay of
Saskatchewan, Canada. He worked among the
Inuit of Canada. In 1923, work began in
India, followed by China and
Burma. In 1927, officials in
Ethiopia invited BCMS to begin work there, but it was not until 1929 that BCMS's first missionaries to Africa arrived in
Morocco. The same year saw a specific request to begin work in
Kenya and
Uganda. The worldwide turmoil around the
Second World War led to the Society's withdrawal from a number of countries: Ethiopia (
1937 war), Burma (
1942 invasion), and China (
1949–51 expulsion). The late 1940s also saw Bartlett finally relinquish leadership to
A. T. Houghton. The following decades saw an increasing focus on East Africa, particularly the
Karamoja area of
Uganda, and the
Diocese of Karamoja retains a strong Crosslinks connection. In the second half of the twentieth century, the tide of
decolonisation led to the scaling down and rethinking of activities in Africa and India. BCMS/Crosslinks has participated in two trends common to most Western missionary societies: • Missionaries are as likely to come from the
Global South as to go there. Given the distribution of Anglicans, this has tended to mean African mission partners joining Crosslinks. • The West is now seen as a mission field. Crosslinks brings African pastors to England and Ireland, it has an environmental protection programme in Western Europe (
A Rocha) and starts new churches in urban England as it traditionally did in rural Africa. The Crosslinks name emphasises the society's principle that Mission is from everywhere to everywhere. The name also helps to make possible work in some of the 60 or so countries where Bible,
Church and
Missionary are not acceptable. ==See also==