Non-attachment (vairagya) as the practice of releasing internalized colonial values and oppressive self-concepts.
Vairagya, often translated as non-attachment or dispassion, invites practitioners to release clinging to false identities and imposed narratives. For African communities experiencing mental distress rooted in colonialism, racism, and devaluation, vairagya becomes a liberatory practice: systematically examining and releasing internalized inferiority, shame, and the demand to perform whiteness or respectability. This is not spiritual bypassing but psychological liberation—recognizing that attachment to oppressive self-concepts perpetuates suffering. African healing traditions already embody this through practices of defiance, self-affirmation, and the refusal of dehumanizing labels. Vairagya provides a contemplative framework for this work: observing without judgment the narratives that bind us, then consciously releasing them in favor of ancestral and communal definitions of worth.
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