The Evangelical Missionary Society was particularly sensitive to the problems of slavery (which would not be abolished in France until 1848). Very quickly, a specific organization independent of the Missionary Society, the organization for fugitive slaves in Saint-Louis, Senegal, was founded, with the aim of “rescuing and evangelizing slaves who, mistreated at home, take refuge in Senegal to escape the barbaric treatment of their owners; selecting from among these fugitives the most willing and intelligent young men to raise in France and making them skilled artisans, teachers, and, if God calls them, missionaries, so that one day Senegal, this land so inhospitable to Europeans, may be evangelized by its own children” (according to the Dictionary of Protestant Works published in 1889). In 1964, the daughter churches established by SMEP missionaries expressed a strong desire to change the tenor of the relationship with the mother church, for their part they wished for 'integration of the Missionary Church to the Mother Church' (''l'intégration de la Mission à l'Église'') This objective was realised in 1970, when two new organizations replaced the SMEP: • CÉVAA ''Communauté évangélique d'action apostolique
(subsequently Communauté d'Églises en Mission
), a federation of sister churches consisting of five Lutheran and reformed churches from France, Italy, Switzerland and those churches with their origins in the missionary work of SMEP'' • DÉFAP, ''Département évangélique français d'action apostolique
(subsequently ), a common missionary service for the five churches of the CÉVAA, with its headquarters at Maison des Missions
102, boulevard Arago, 75014 Paris, (former seat of the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society). DÉFAP continues to publish the monthly magazine Mission
, the Journal des missions évangéliques'', the SMEP. == Bibliography ==