Mizo Kristian Hla Hmasa Ber [cracked]
Mizo hla hmasate hian Mizoram Kristian chanchinah leh hnam thinlung thlak danglamnaah hmun pawimawh tak an luah a ni.
To understand the weight of the first hymn, one must understand the spiritual vacuum of pre-colonial Mizo society. The Mizos believed in a cycle of Pathian (a benevolent sky god) and Ramhuai (malevolent spirits). Their rituals, often bloody and fear-based, were accompanied by specific chants. When the Welsh missionaries of the Arthington Aborigines Mission arrived in 1894 at Sairang, they brought with them the Gospel of Luke and a collection of English and Welsh hymns. However, the initial message was verbal and textual. The missionaries realized quickly that the Mizo—a tribe with a robust oral tradition—would learn doctrine faster through melody than through sermons alone. mizo kristian hla hmasa ber
Mizo Kristian hla hmasa ber "Isua ka hmangaih, Amah'n min hmangaih" Mizo hla hmasate hian Mizoram Kristian chanchinah leh
(Jesus is in Heaven). It was composed by the pioneering missionaries J.H. Lorrain (known locally as Pu Buanga) and F.W. Savidge Historical Background Composition Their rituals, often bloody and fear-based, were accompanied