Asmita (ego-sense, false identity) in Patanjali's kleshas illuminates how colonialism installs false selves in African consciousness, and how healing requires reclaiming authentic cultural identity.
Patanjali identifies asmita—the false ego-sense that creates identification with mind, body, and social roles—as one of the five kleshas (afflictions) that generate suffering. For African people, colonialism itself operates as a systematic installation of asmita: forcing identification with inferiority, criminality, subservience, and European aesthetic and intellectual standards while erasing authentic African identity. Mental distress symptoms like depression, anxiety, and shame often root in this colonial asmita—the exhaustion and self-hatred of living a false self. Healing requires what scholars call decolonization: the deliberate recovery of African identity through language reclamation, aesthetic restoration, spiritual practice, and community recognition. This might include: learning indigenous languages, embracing natural hair and African fashion, reconnecting with ancestral spirituality, and building economic self-determination. By understanding decolonial work through Patanjali's asmita framework, African healers position identity recovery as legitimate psychological intervention—not vanity or politics, but the dissolution of a pathogenic false self that colonialism constructed.
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