French Polynesian Missionary Day around the world in 2025

French Polynesian Missionary Day around the world in 2025
The missionary ship "Duff" arriving at Tahiti in 1797. Image via National Library of New Zealand
  How long until French Polynesian Missionary Day?
French Polynesian Missionary Day
  Dates of French Polynesian Missionary Day around the world
2025 French PolynesiaMar 5
French Polynesia Wed, Mar 5National Holiday
2024 French PolynesiaMar 5
French Polynesia Tue, Mar 5National Holiday
2023 French PolynesiaMar 5
French Polynesia Sun, Mar 5National Holiday
2022 French PolynesiaMar 5
French Polynesia Sat, Mar 5National Holiday
2021 French PolynesiaMar 5
French Polynesia Fri, Mar 5National Holiday
  Summary

Marks the arrival of the London Missionary Society (LMS) missionaries on March 5th 1797

When is Missionary Day?

Missionary Day is a public holiday in French Polynesia, observed on 5th March.

It commemorates the arrival of the Christian missionaries on this day in 1797.

History of Missionary Day

French Polynesia, the only overseas country of France, is a collection of over 100 islands and atolls in the South Pacific Ocean. Its remote location means it was one of the last places on Earth to become inhabited by humans.

The first inhabitants arrived from Western Polynesia in about 200 AD. The islands were sighted by the great Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan in 1521.

Most of the major colonial powers explored the various islands and the islander's first encounter with Christian missionaries was with Spanish priests who would stay on the islands for up to a year.

In March 1797, Protestant missionaries from the London Missionary Society (LMS) arrived, establishing a permanent presence in Polynesia.

The LMS had been formed a few years earlier with the intention of spreading Christianity across the world.

The 'Duff' arrived in Matavai Bay, Tahiti on March 5th 1797, with seventeen missionaries who intended to build friendships with the locals, build a mission house for sleeping and worship, and learn the native language.  The missionaries faced initial resistance from the locals who had seen the arrival of earlier European ships bring new and unknown diseases to the islands. Eight of the seventeen missionaries left when the next British ship arrived in Tahiti.

The ones that stayed eventually had success in converting the locals including Pomare II, the king of Tahiti, who was converted from traditional beliefs to the Reformed tradition. This conversion formed the basis for the Maohi Protestant Church which is the largest in French Polynesia with followers accounting for more than half the population.


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