Patanjali's ethical restraints (yamas) provide a philosophical framework for African healing traditions' emphasis on restored relationships and restorative justice as mental health practice.
The yamas—ahimsa (non-harm), satya (truth), asteya (non-theft), brahmacharya (vital energy integrity), and aparigraha (non-grasping)—govern right relationship. African healing traditions emphasize that individual mental distress cannot be healed in isolation from relational harm and broken social fabric. Ahimsa includes ceasing internal self-harm and external violence; satya requires honest acknowledgment of historical wrongs and present realities; asteya means restoring what was stolen—land, labor, dignity, children; brahmacharya protects life-force from exploitation; aparigraha releases the grip of resentment and greed. These yamas map onto restorative justice frameworks now gaining recognition in African contexts. Truth commissions, reparations work, conflict circles, and ancestral reconciliation practices embody yama principles. Mental distress often roots in violated yamas—harmed relationships, unspoken truths, stolen resources, depleted vitality. By recognizing African restorative practices as yama embodiment, healers legitimize relationship repair as essential mental health work, not peripheral spirituality.
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