Ancestral calling as identity and the rite of passage: The case of Vhavenḓa indigenous healers

Author:

Sigida Salome Thilivhali1,Sodi Tholene1

Affiliation:

1. University of Limpopo

Abstract

Accepting the ancestral calling to healing and undergoing the training to become a traditional healer in southern Africa is seen as a process of identity formation which is constructed by the knowledge acquired throughout the process. The researcher embarked on a journey with traditional health practitioners to understand their lived experiences and explored the psychological meanings of Vhavenḓa ancestral calling with a view to identifying and documenting the psychological meanings embedded in this culturally entrenched practice. A qualitative research method located within the interpretative paradigm was used. A descriptive phenomenological research design was adopted to explore the lived experiences of traditional health practitioners who have gone through the process of ancestral calling. Both snowball and purposive sampling methods were used to recruit 17 participants until saturation was researched in the findings. The findings of the study revealed that there are several symptoms that are indicative that one has an ancestral calling. These symptoms are often misunderstood and misdiagnosed when interpreted from the Western and Eurocentric perspectives. However, accepting the ancestral calling and going through training is linked with identity formation. The findings also revealed that ancestral calling is a life-transforming and therapeutic experience and a journey of self-realisation.

Publisher

Africajournals

Subject

Philosophy,Religious studies,Archeology

Reference42 articles.

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2. Bakow, B. R. & Low, K. (2018). A South African experience: Cultural determinants of ukuthwasa. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 49(3), 436–452.

3. Bodoker, G. C. (2009). Traditional medicine: Manson’s tropical diseases. In G. Cook, & A. Zumla (Eds). Manson Tropical Disease (pp. 33–35). London, England: WB Saunders.

4. Booi, B. N. (2004). Three perspectives on ukuthwasa: The view from traditional beliefs, Western psychiatry and transpersonal psychology. (Unpublished Master’s thesis), Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa.

5. Crossman, A. (2016). Snowball sample. Retrieved from: https://explorable.com/snowball sampling-chain-referral-sampling.

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