1. This historical pattern was modified by the end of the twentieth century with the migration of Mennonite colonists from Mexico to central Argentina. The colony, however, maintains its ethnic identity in an almost complete isolation from its Latin American context. See Juan F. Martínez, “Latin American Anabaptist-Mennonites: A Profile,” Mennonite Quarterly Review 74.3 (2000): 466.
2. Besides Martinez, see Jaime Prieto Valladares, Mission and Migration. Latin America: A Global Mennonite History (Riverside, NJ: Good Books, 2010).
3. Sjouke Voolstra, Menno Simons: His Image and Message (Newton, KA: Bethel College, 1997), 88–91.
4. Willis Horst, Ute Mueller-Eckhart, and Frank Paul, Misión sin conquista: Acompañamiento de comunidades indígenas autóctonas como práctica misionera alternativa (Buenos Aires: Kairos, 2009), 255–260.
5. Letty M. Russell, “God, Gold, Glory, and Gender: A Postcolonial View of Mission,” International Review of Mission 93.368 (2004): 41.