Sunday, December 19, 2010

Ubuntu and the Holidays


HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!!! 
This is the time to be happy, jolly, and all that good stuff that usually follows the month of December. Even if the holidays aren’t celebrated by your family, it’s hard to avoid all the festivities of this time of year and not get caught up in other’s happiness. You might tip your waiter extra and help out a person in need. You feel their pain and hope and want to help. And essentially, that’s Ubuntu. It’s a Southern African word from the Bantu language that has no direct translation to English. It’s close to, “I am what I am because of who we all are.” The closest meaning is that we are human through our connections to other people.  It’s “the essence of being human,” of not being able to be human alone and the need of others and interconnectedness to survive. It’s empathy and experiencing others emotions as your own to understand them as mentioned in the Rifkin RSA video. And it’s not the just the survival of one, it’s the survival of the entire world and how one thing is going to affect everyone. In short, it’s the bond that unites the human race through every possible barrier.
To me, Ubuntu took on a “united we stand and we divided we fall” kind of aspect. Taking it to extreme measures, or not so extreme since the world already seems to be in a dire situation, we could say that without mankind uniting as one, without Ubuntu, there is no hope for the human race. There is too much hatred and bloodshed. However, there is always the desire, the hope for change. And in fact the world experienced a recent increase in empathy when the whole world rushed to the disaster in Haiti. Humans are capable of empathy and if we can reach out to everyone as a family, it could change the world. This thought is from the Rifkin RSA video which illustrates that that we need to comes together as a biosphere to truly help the world. The boundaries that people have put up about politics, religion and race have to taken down to consider each other as fellow humans. To an extent there is Ubuntu, but it needs to widen significantly to remove those barriers.
From the beginning of this Humanity Unit, I’ve wanted to learn what makes certain people hopeful in the face of death and loneliness. And now I’ve discovered that Ubuntu is that one “can't exist as a human being in isolation.”  We need interconnectedness to survive as humans and to make the world a better place full of hope. We can spread the holiday cheer to the needy and show that they are part of this extended family. That they’re cared for and not alone. Happy Holidays.

1 comment:

  1. I had never heard about Ubuntu until I read your blog post, but I'm glad I know it now because it's a great term. It relates to the theme of my blog, limitations to identity, because it explains that we would not be who we are without the people around us. I agree with you that Ubuntu is especially important and prominent around the holiday season, but it would really be great if people could think in terms of interconnectedness all year round.

    Also, I saw in your intro post that you like to read, and my latest post is a book review so I thought you might like it! I highly recommend the book :]
    http://asontag.blogspot.com/2011/01/color-me-butterfly.html

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