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A Metaphysical, Spiritual, Holistic Publication   |   In Light Times   |    June 2002 Index

Remembering Our Purpose
 An Interview with Malidoma Somé 

By Sarah van Gilder

There was a time when all people were indigenous people on some part of the Earth. But in the last half of the millennium, the migration of people from region to region and from countryside to city broke many of the ties we used to have to one another and to the land and water that supported us.

Those who didn’t make that move, the indigenous peoples of the world, can help us remember what it’s like to be connected to the environment and to each other in a community. This is valuable not because we would necessarily want to return to the way we used to live, but because facets of that connectedness can contribute greatly as we create a sustainable way of life.

One person who is helping the people of the West better understand what indigenous cultures have to offer is Malidoma Somé from the Dagara tribe in the Burkina Faso region of West Africa.

Malidoma, born in 1956, was taken from his family at the age of five by missionaries and sent to a Jesuit boarding school. When at the age of 20 he returned to Dano, his village, he was unable to speak his native tongue, unlearned in the ways of his people, and only his mother recognized him. He was filled with contempt and anger toward the Jesuits for the treatment he had received at their hands, and toward his village for handing him away.

Determined to spiritually and emotionally reconnect with his tribe, Malidoma urged the village elders to allow him to undergo the arduous process of initiation, a rite of passage usually undertaken at a much earlier age.

After much consideration, they agreed. Malidoma passed the six-week long ordeal and was enthusiastically welcomed back into the tribe. He later went on to the Sorbonne in Paris, where he earned a doctorate in political science, and Brandeis University in Boston, where he received a Ph.D. in literature.

He now writes and speaks about the lessons of the indigenous world, and leads workshops for men, and for men and women, on initiation, ritual, and healing.


Sarah: From what I’ve heard of your life as a child, you’ve had some very negative experiences at the hands of Europeans.

Malidoma: Oh, absolutely…

Sarah: And yet you don’t seem to hold any bitterness now.

Malidoma: Well, it would be an exaggeration to say that I don’t hold any bitterness, but the process that my own culture allowed me to go through released a lot of disastrous anger.

Sarah: What was it that helped you get over that anger and bitterness? 

Malidoma: The principal present my culture provided me was a much greater sense of my own identity, an identity that was not defined, but rather remembered. It provided me a much greater trust in myself, a greater hope for a future, and a very grounded walk in my day-to-day life that does not have to wait for outside affirmation.

My name, Malidoma, means to seek friendship with strangers. My elders told me, as long as I do what I am destined to do — that is, to be a kind of linking agent between cultures — I don’t have to worry about where to find the words or where to find the meaning to convey to an audience.

 

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