The five afflictions that cause suffering parallel African understanding of how intergenerational trauma, spiritual wounding, and disconnection from source create psychological distress requiring multi-level healing.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas (afflictions or obstacles): avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego), raga (craving), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death). These map remarkably onto the deep sources of mental distress in African communities: ignorance of true identity and heritage, ego-fragmentation from colonization, cravings for external validation, aversions to the body/blackness/African identity, and existential terror about survival and meaning. Unlike Western psychology that focuses on symptoms, the klesa framework identifies root causes requiring different interventions at different levels. Avidya demands education and remembering; asmita requires identity reconstruction; raga and dvesha need emotional regulation and value reclamation; abhinivesha requires spiritual reconnection and meaning-making. African healing traditions have always worked multi-dimensionally—addressing physical health, emotional wellbeing, social relationships, spiritual alignment, and ancestral relationships simultaneously. By understanding distress through the klesa framework, modern practitioners can design comprehensive interventions that address root causes rather than merely managing symptoms. This approach legitimizes the African understanding that real healing requires transformation at multiple levels simultaneously.
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