BLOG: Shoulders of Giants – George and Jane Pearse

From the earliest days as the Mission to the Kabyles, to today being part of the Pioneers global family, we remember the faithfulness of God and the many men and women that He has used powerfully to bring the gospel to the nations. As we press forward in ministry, we want to celebrate their lives. In this series we will tell their stories.

George and Jane Pearse

Trailblazers and founders of the North Africa Mission

Following the leading of the Holy Spirit, the Pearses radically changed their focus of ministry to reach forgotten people in Algeria.

The Pearses were pivotal figures in the founding of what became AWM-Pioneers. George was a stockbroker in London, initially able to support their ministry in France through working for just a few months of the year. He was also heavily involved in ministry and Honorary Secretary of the Chinese Evangelisation Society who initially sent Hudson Taylor to China in 1853. Jane had been converted through the ministry of Henry Gratten Guinness in Paris and she and George continued to have a heart for France. They set up a mission station with the aim of reaching French soldiers with the gospel. However, when local opposition arose, they adapted their approach and went to Algeria in 1876 with the hope of continuing the work with troops posted there. Little did they know that God would use this trip to stir their hearts for the local Kabyle people.

On one night of their stay, in the early hours of the morning, Jane looked down from the balcony of the guesthouse to see what she initially thought were a bundle of rags in the street. Looking closer, she realised that the bundle was a man and another lay nearby, his face turned up in pain towards the moon. She could not go out to help them as the guesthouse was locked up for the night. But, early in the morning, when the Arab water carrier came, and the house unlocked, she asked what had happened to the men. They had starved to death in the night. Seeing her horrified expression, the man told her “Their fate affects me about as much as a dead dog would; I am used to it; hundreds have gone in a short time” (Algeria was in the midst of famine). The sight and this reaction rested heavy on Jane’s mind and she and George began praying that something could be done to bring the gospel to these forgotten people.

In 1880, the Pearses returned to Algeria to survey the country. George was 65 by this time. After briefly returning to England to recruit new workers and begin language study, in 1881, they came back with a small team: with Edward Glenny (who would go on to lead the mission for over 40 years), Henri Mayor (a Swiss teacher), and Selim Zeitoun (a Syrian convert who had translated literature). At the time there were no other Protestant missionaries working with local Muslims across North Africa, although that would quickly change as other organisations and missionaries saw the need. The North Africa Mission would grow from this mission station at Djemma Sahridj to number 115 workers by 1900.

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