Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Reclaiming Sacred Naming in Kinship

Using intentional naming practices to restore dignity, affirm identity, and strengthen kinship bonds across generations.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai called herself "the bride of Krishna," claiming a sacred name that defied social categories. She named her spiritual identity against conventional naming structures. In African Ubuntu Love and Kinship, naming is a sacred practice—names carry history, intention, blessing, and identity. Colonialism disrupted this through forced renaming, erasure of indigenous names, and denial of identity. Reclaiming sacred naming means: learning the significance of ancestral names, giving children names that honor their lineage, calling people by their chosen names as an act of respect, and using language that affirms dignity. This goes beyond literal names to the stories we tell about ourselves and each other. Do we name our youth as "criminals" or as "makers"? Do we speak of our elders as "burdens" or as "wisdom keepers"? Do we name our struggles as "failures" or as "learning"? In Ubuntu kinship, how we name people and situations shapes reality. Sacred naming in community involves elders blessing young people into their gifts, peers affirming each other's strengths, and communities reframing their collective narratives from shame to resilience. Mirabai teaches that naming yourself with spiritual authority is an act of freedom. In kinship, intentional naming restores what was lost and calls forth who we are becoming.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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