I am an American NTM MK who married a non-U.S. citizen. We spent a few years in NTM as a couple before resigning and changing organizations. I am opening this thread to discuss the experiences of non-U.S. NTM members. I would love to learn more how I, an American, can learn more about cross-cultural relationships. Even with my many years of experience living in other cultures, there is still so much for me to learn.
Even though I was completely comfortable within NTM, I slowly began to realize that my husband was not...he was just very noble and put up with it, perhaps for my sake although he did admit that he also desired acceptance by the mission. One story that he shared with me helped me realize some of what he had experienced, sometimes on a daily basis. He was chatting with another missionary, an English-speaking American in the NTM office. Another missionary approached and began a conversation with the missionary my husband was speaking to without acknowledging or greeting my husband. This would be considered rude in any culture, probably, but in the Latin/Hispanic culture, this man was communicating very clearly that my husband was so beneath him that he was not worthy of greeting or of being noticed...it was if he was invisible.
It could be argued that this man was just really oblivious and had no idea of how he came across (so then what good was his time of CLA Culture and Language Acquisition?), but this was not an isolated incident and after a while of it happening all the time, my husband said it became very hard to continue to forgive and overlook. He said it put him in a very difficult position...he wanted to be godly and yet it was very hard to struggle with the feelings that were rising up in him and the constant need to offer forgiveness (have I mentioned he is very noble?) without being asked for it. One could say he should have been 'Biblical' and gone to the offender, but this is a sticky thing in some cultures...with his cultural background, it is very difficult to call attention to being offended in this way (and besides, when he did finally have the courage to bring it up, he was accused by leadership of being unforgiving, which was hurtful)...there are ways that this culture addresses these issues, but they just aren't as confrontational (usually) and verbally direct as we Americans might be. And we Americans aren't as good at detecting the nonverbal signals that other cultures are adept at sending and receiving. I finally just realized that my husband's need for respect and acceptance was more important than my felt need to 'belong' to NTM and I determined to never again ask him to sacrifice his self-respect for my petty whatevers.
I don't think that NTM is the only mission organization that struggles with integrating members from different countries...I imagine that this is a huge challenge for any organization with members from all over. However, the agency that we work with now places a high priority on teamwork, whatever it takes, and that is a good place to start. I have noticed, however, that the use of English seems to be somewhat standard in our current org. and I have often noticed members speaking English in front of locals...I believe that there is some leeway in that, perhaps, but I strongly believe that the effort should be made to adapt to the local culture/language as much as possible. Missionaries chose to be missionaries and go live in another country, right? So why the attitude that the locals should adapt to the foreigners and not the other way around? One local friend who had gone through the NTM national training (but didn't go on with NTM) told me that it's like these missionaries stamp the U.S. flag on the bottom of their shoes and that way everywhere they step is American soil! LOL But maybe sadly true?
And as it turned out, the more my husband and I tried to adapt to the local culture, the further we 'strayed' from the NTM culture, which in itself was an eye-opener for me. We were in a country where there isn't too much of a gap between the two cultures (U.S. and local culture)...I imagine that it must be a bit of a different dynamic to adapt to a culture that is vastly different than one's own, such as in PNG. But anyway, that's a whole other topic that I haven't got time to go into right now.
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