Ahimsa (non-violence) as the foundational yama applies to African healing's ethical requirement to approach trauma survivors with care that honors dignity, agency, and relational repair.
Patanjali identifies ahimsa—non-violence in thought, word, and action—as the primary ethical foundation (yama) of yogic life. For African healing traditions addressing mental distress rooted in violence, enslavement, and systemic harm, ahimsa becomes the ethical blueprint for how healing work itself must be conducted. African healers working with trauma survivors must embody non-violence through: honoring consent and agency, validating survivors' spiritual interpretations of suffering, avoiding re-traumatizing interrogation, and facilitating dignity-centered healing rather than shame-based confession. The concept extends ahimsa beyond individual practice to institutional and relational violence: racism, poverty, medical gaslighting, and cultural erasure that compound mental distress. By centering ahimsa, African healing frameworks insist that the healer's words, touch, and presence themselves must be non-violent—acknowledging power imbalances and refusing to exploit vulnerability. This ethical framework distinguishes authentic healing from extractive or hierarchical practices that may replicate historical harm.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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