Pharos Journal of Theology ISSN 2414-3324 online Volume 102 – Special Ed 2 (2021)
Copyright: ©2021 Open Access/Author/s - Online @ http//: www.pharosjot.com
1
The Covid-19 Pandemic and Religious Activities: A
Case Study of Esikhaleni Settlement
Lawrence Korsi, Vorvornator
University of Zululand, KwaDlangezwa, 3886, South Africa
Email: vorlaw@gmail.com
ORCID ID 0000-0002-4475-6665
Joyce Mdiniso
University of Zululand, KwaDlangezwa, 3886, South Africa
University of Zululand South Africa
Email: MdinisoJ@unizulu.ac.za
ORCID ID: 0000-0001-9618-49
Doi:https://doi.org/10.46222/pharosjot.102.213
Abstract
The COVID-19 virus allegedly originated from Wuhan, China and spread globally including
South Africa and forced the country into restricted lockdown. This study analyses COVID-19
and religious activities during lockdown among dwellers in the rural community of Esikhaleni
in South Africa’s KwaZulu Natal province. A qualitative approach was employed including thirty
participants who were selected through random sampling. Telephonic interviews were
conducted with the respondents from 1
st
to 30
th
May, 2020. Durkhein’s ideas of functional
religion in Sociology relating to the human race being together, sharing solace and love with
the destitute were defied by COVID-19 protocols. These protocols of the state implemented
social and physical distancing to be observed to curb a high infection rate (WHO, 2020). As a
result social gatherings were halted, which posed severe challenges to religious bodies to
meet, praise and worship as the normally do. Some religious bodies then, resorted to online
approaches and used media platforms such as, Zoom, Skype, and even WhatsApp to deliver
their services. Major events by some religious organisations including baptisms, crusading,
evangelism, and Hajj pilgrimages by Muslim adherents were also postponed. The COVID-19
catastrophe befalling the destitute and needy in society forced religious bodies to extend their
arms to those in dire need of help. Challenges during the use of online services included both
leaders and congregants not having the requisite technical know-how to connect the
programmes. There were also issues related to network connectivity, intermittent power
interruption, and the inordinately high cost of data procurement in South Africa for especially
the poor. Overall, despite COVID-19 protocols preventing social gatherings, religious bodies,
developed other means to keep their spiritual tempo and ought to overcome a sense of
hopelessness bestowed on congregants by the pandemic – but sadly this omitted the poor. It
is recommended that, religious leaders must learn to use ICT effectively, because COVID-19
might be here for some length of time to come. Moreover, religious leaders must also strive to
educate their congregants to observe COVID-19 protocols and seek to avoid a third imminent
wave of the virus, instead of laying blame at the door steps of government. Religious orders
need to urgently embrace technological solutions which is sadly not always possible due to
limited resources. Getting the masses out of poverty through job creation would also go a long
way to help when future pandemics arise, and they surely will.
Keywords: Lockdown, religious bodies, pandemic, covid-19, Esikhaleni settlement.
Introduction
Open Rubric