The principle that employment should enhance rather than diminish human autonomy, reflecting Yacob's focus on freedom and Buddhist principles of liberation.
Zera Yacob was born enslaved and spent his life asserting human freedom as inseparable from reason and dignity. Modern employment often recreates servitude: workers lack scheduling autonomy, endure surveillance, fear retaliation for speech, and depend entirely on employers for survival. Buddhist right livelihood requires that work not create bondage to external authorities or internal craving. This concept examines employment through the lens of freedom: Does this job allow autonomous decision-making? Can I leave without destitution? Am I trusted or monitored like property? Does it demand 60-hour weeks that leave no time for spiritual practice or family? Freedom in employment means portable skills, fair compensation that builds savings, reasonable hours, dignity in treatment, and the real ability to refuse harm. It also means examining how to build economic resilience—savings, cooperative structures, mutual aid networks—that protects freedom from desperation.
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