ALL ABOUT JOHANNA VEENSTRA![]() Johanna Veenstra (1894 - 1933) by Timothy P. PalmerJohanna Veenstra was the first missionary of the Christian Reformed Church (CRC) to go to Nigeria. She was born on Thursday, April 19, 1894, on Hopper Street in Paterson, New Jersey. Her parents were William Veenstra, later a Christian Reformed pastor, and Cornelia Anna De Hoop. In 1915 she was challenged by Karl Kumm of the Sudan United Mission (SUM) to be a missionary in Africa. On October 2, 1919, she left New York on the "Mauretania" for England; on December 31, 1919, she took another ship to Africa, arriving in Lagos in January 1920. In February 1921, she arrived at her station in Lupwe, which is near Takum, now in Taraba State. Two years later Johanna Veenstra assumed leadership of the work in Lupwe. She was engaged primarily in medical work and in preaching. During her ministry in Lupwe, a number of people especially of the Kuteb tribe became Christian. The roots of the Christian Reformed Church of Nigeria (CRCN) lay in part in the work of Johanna Veenstra.
Select Bibliography Beets, Henry. Johanna of Nigeria. Grand Rapids: Grand Rapids Printing Company, 1937. Palmer, Timothy. The Reformed and Presbyterian Faith: A View from Nigeria. Bukuru: TCNN Publications, 1996. (Available from Africa Christian Textbooks.)
Veenstra, Johanna. Pioneering for Christ in the Sudan. Grand Rapids: Smitter Book Co., 1926.
Johanna sightings:
Books by Johanna Veenstra Black Diamonds (1929)
Johanna Veenstra: (Heroes of the Cross series) by Winifred M. Pierce (1957) The Letters of Miss Johanna Veenstra (compiled from The Banner and De Heidenwereld aka Missionary Monthly) by Dr. Timothy Palmer (available through CRWM--e-mail us if you'd like to purchase a copy.) Additional resources that mention JohannaFrom Jerusalem to Irian Jaya: A Biographical History of Christian Missions by Ruth Tucker They Knew Their God, Volume I By Edwin and Lillian Harvey and Elizabeth Hey SUE HELDER GOLIBER, PhD. Professor of History, Mount St. Mary's University If you know of other Johanna resources, contact Lorraine Woodward. |

