Last week, my niece posted a photograph of her new tattoo: hands, holding the Earth, with the word “Ubuntu” inscribed below it.
The next day, I met singer/songwriter Sara Thomsen, and saw her project booklet (from an event combining music, art, poetry) titled Ubuntu.
On the third day, I walked into my brother’s home in Chicago and immediately saw a sign, “I am because we are.” In other words, ubuntu.
Some, perhaps many, people would have me believe this is a great example of the Baader-Meinhof phenomenon (also known as frequency illusion). But that would remove all of the magic and wonder from the experience of such synchronicities—and I believe that magic and wonder are absolutely necessary these days. I refuse to give them up in the name of psychology.
I first heard the word and concept of ubuntu in a televised interview with Desmond Tutu 20 years ago. He roughly translated it as “a person is a person through other people”—I remember it because I immediately wrote it in my journal so I wouldn’t forget. It spoke to me very deeply of what I knew in my heart but always had difficulty articulating: namely, that we are all intimately connected with one another. The concept has a long history and has been translated in various ways, though maintaining throughout its essential character. Ubuntu is about relationships. (See more history here.)
Though I haven’t had a chance to ask her yet, my niece Hallie most likely became aware of the concept because of her love for and travels to Africa. Hallie is our social justice warrior, our peacemaker, our world citizen. Ubuntu is a concept she has understood since she was quite young, regardless of when she learned the word that names it. Hallie has a heart for the world and will fight for equality and opportunity and fairness for all. When I saw the beautiful photo of her tattoo I couldn’t help but feel emotional. “My humanity is inextricably bound up in yours,” she declares. It is written on her body.
I met Sara Thomsen when she was one of the facilitators for our annual Spirituality in the 21st Century event. I learned about her work with the Echoes of Peace community choir, and their “Art of Ubuntu” project. Prairiewoods’ vision, expressed through offerings such as our annual event, is beautifully commensurate with the Beloved Community described in this quote from the “Art of Ubuntu” project materials:
It is like the Beloved Community, the “network of mutuality” of which Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke … “We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. This is the interrelated structure of all reality. You can never be what you ought to be until I become what I ought to be.”
Immediately after closing our conference on Saturday, I drove to Chicago. The main reason for the trip was to see my niece Zoe in the role of Veruca Salt in her school production of Willy Wonka. (She was awesome!) As I joined together with family and friends after the production, I was once again reminded that connectedness is our nature. “I am because we are,” as the sign in my brother’s living room declares.
Ubuntu: I so needed this repetition of the concept. I refuse to chalk it up to a mental trick or illusion. When you are parched and thirsty, water is always a miracle, not merely a chemical compound of hydrogen and oxygen. More than anything, I needed the reminder that there are many others who hold ubuntu in their hearts. It is inspiring and affirming and it offers me energy for whatever this day or the next may bring.
As Sara Thomsen’s song “By Breath” says:
“The fire in my heart, my soul flame burning
Is the fire in your heart, your soul flame burning
We are Spirit burning bright, by the light of day, in the dark of night
We are shining like the sun, and like the moon, like the Holy OneBy breath, by blood, by body, by spirit, we are all one”
—Jenifer Hanson, Prairiewoods director
Posted May 23, 2017