Description
This significant historical work by Abbé J. A. Dubois offers a candid and detailed analysis of Christian missionary efforts in India during the colonial period. Written from the perspective of an experienced missionary who spent decades in India, the text examines the cultural, social, and religious barriers to converting Hindu populations to Christianity.
Dubois presents a systematic argument that conversion of Hindus was impracticable given the deeply rooted nature of Hindu traditions, social hierarchies, and philosophical frameworks. Rather than attributing failure to lack of missionary zeal, he identifies structural obstacles inherent to Indian society itself. The work serves as an important primary source for understanding both missionary perspectives and Indian religious resilience during the colonial era.
This reprint by Gyan Publishing House preserves an important historical document that provides insights into early 19th-century cross-cultural encounters, religious attitudes, and the complexities of religious conversion in colonial contexts.







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