Patanjali identifies five kleshas (afflictions) that bind consciousness; African healing ceremonies provide spaces where these afflictions—especially grief and ignorance—can be witnessed and metabolized collectively.
Patanjali names five kleshas (avidya, asmita, raga, dvesha, abhinivesha)—fundamental afflictions that create suffering and bind consciousness. In African contexts, colonialism, slavery, displacement, and ongoing racism intensify these kleshas, particularly the grief (dvesha) and ignorance (avidya) of disconnection. Individual psychotherapy alone often cannot process the depth of intergenerational and collective trauma embedded in these klesha patterns. African healing ceremonies address this by creating spaces where grief can be named, witnessed, and transformed through collective presence. When a person's deep sorrow is held by the community, when ancestral pain is acknowledged through ritual, when the body is allowed to grieve through movement and sound—the klesha begins to dissolve not through cognitive reframing but through metabolization. Patanjali understood that afflictions must be witnessed and gradually released; African healers create the collective container where this witnessing becomes possible. The kleshas lose their binding power when they are no longer carried in shame and isolation but acknowledged within a community that says: these wounds are real, they are not your fault, and we will help carry them forward with dignity and meaning.
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