Christianity has rarely done well in countries that have not been colonies of the Western powers. Japan and China have not been Western colonies. However, Christian churches continue to apply resources and are quietly making some gains.
The simple answer is "those who were not Christian".
to convert Africans to Christianity
To spread Christian Ideology and convert people to the church said missionary represents
Christian missionaries.
Yes, but only if they convert to Christianity if they aren't already Christian, see how cruel they are.
Missionaries from the Christian part of Europe traveled to those countries to convert the pagans.
A favorite target of Christian missionaries in the late nineteenth century was Africa, particularly countries in West Africa due to the perceived lack of Christian presence and the opportunity for expansion of their faith. Missionaries sought to convert the indigenous populations to Christianity and establish churches and schools in these regions.
well, the missionaries mostly came from the eastern United States by means of the Oregon trail to convert the non-christian Native Americans. Also, there were many sub-divisions of the christian religion that were being taught to the indians.
Yes Although the majority are Muslims, the Christian Missionaries are very active in persuading convert to Christianity.
The major barrier that hindered Japan mostly, was the Portugeese missionaries looking to convert The Japs into, well, Christians.
There probably are a few Christian missionaries, but the Syrian Civil War is hindering their access to the population and large swathes of Syria are under control of ISIL which imposes Shari'a Law and murders missionaries. Historically, Syria was a Secular country with a Pro-Muslim bent. Missionaries would be heckled and possibly physically attacked. Additionally, proselytization of Muslims (to convert them to another religion like Christianity) was illegal and could lead to the imprisonment or deportation of foreign missionaries.
This service can convert dozens of languages, including all of the major European languages, Arabic, Hindi, Afrikaans, Chinese, Japanese, and Vietnamese.