The five afflictions (kleshas) reexamined as mental patterns originating in colonial violence and systemic oppression.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas—ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear of death—as the root causes of suffering. Applied to African mental distress, these kleshas take on specific historical forms: ignorance of one's ancestral power, ego distorted by racism, attachment to survival modes, aversion to one's own Blackness or Africanity, and existential fear born from genocidal histories. Traditional psychiatry pathologizes these responses as individual dysfunction; a klisha lens reveals them as rational, even adaptive, responses to colonialism. African healing traditions address kleshas not through medication but through reconnection: ancestral knowledge counters ignorance, communal affirmation heals ego wounds, freedom work releases unhealthy attachments, pride practices transform aversion, and ritual restores faith in continuity and future. Understanding mental distress as klisha-rooted validates the comprehensive, spiritual interventions African traditions employ.
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