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Jakob Montrasio - Wikimedia
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People Name: | Han Chinese, Mandarin |
Country: | Norway |
10/40 Window: | No |
Population: | 13,000 |
World Population: | 931,431,600 |
Primary Language: | Chinese, Mandarin |
Primary Religion: | Non-Religious |
Christian Adherents: | 8.00 % |
Evangelicals: | 5.70 % |
Scripture: | Complete Bible |
Ministry Resources: | Yes |
Jesus Film: | Yes |
Audio Recordings: | Yes |
People Cluster: | Chinese |
Affinity Bloc: | East Asian Peoples |
Progress Level: |
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The Han Chinese are the largest ethnic group worldwide. They are the majority in China, but there is a Chinese diaspora in most nations of the world including Norway.
The Han Chinese fled to other countries after the Mongol invasion in 1276. Many other upheavals and conflicts followed, and the Chinese continued to settle in other nations, especially in Southeast Asia. Sometimes they migrated as refugees but they are more likely to settle elsewhere for business purposes.
The Chinese languages are united by a writing system that people who speak any Chinese language can understand. It’s very different with spoken Chinese; few dialects are intelligible to the other. The largest Chinese language is Mandarin.
Mandarin has four subdialects, but these are mutually intelligible. One of the subdialects was from Beijing, China's capital city and power center. It was the language of the educated classes and made the official language during the Qing dynasty in the early 20th century. The Chinese government wasn’t strong enough to enforce it until the 1949 communist revolution. Mao gained far more power than any Chinese leader, and Mandarin became the official language taught in Chinese schools from that time forward. Though the Chinese kept their local dialects, Mandarin became the language of media, education, business and government throughout China.
There is a small Chinese community in Norway and most speak Mandarin. There have been Chinese people in Norway for a couple of decades. Most came as students, businessmen or professionals.
The Mandarin Chinese in Norway are there for educational business or work opportunities. They are known as hard workers and respectful. The Mandarin Chinese get involved with community affairs, cultural organizations and language classes.
In Norway, most of the Mandarin Chinese are secularized, either from the influence of the PRC government or from the spiritual environment of Norway. However, there are strong Christ followers among them who can take the gospel to others.
Materialism can become an idol. Even Christians among the Mandarin Chinese can easily dedicate their lives to making money. Bible-based Christians among them can offer a biblical perspective.
Pray for Mandarin evangelists, filled with the fruit of the Holy Spirit, to disciple hundreds in the ways of Christ.
Pray for Mandarin speakers to begin a family-based movement to Christ that will bless them abundantly.
Pray for Mandarin speakers to have the spiritual hunger to seek and find Jesus Christ.