Sankofa and Wabi-Sabi

Sankofa · Akan / Ghanaian

Begin with the word itself. Sankofa, in Akan / Twi, sits in a different grammatical and emotional register than its closest English equivalents. Sankofa and Wabi-Sabi? You cannot answer that question without first sitting with the word — and noticing what English doesn't quite have a slot for.

What Sankofa Actually Means

Sankofa is an Akan word and a symbol — most often a bird with its head turned backward, holding an egg in its beak. The egg is the future; the head turned backward is the past. Together they teach a simple, demanding idea: it is not wrong, nor shameful, to go back and fetch what you forgot. The future cannot be built on amnesia. This much is on Wikipedia and in introductory leadership books. What is harder to find — and harder to translate — is the texture of the concept: the way Sankofa shapes a thousand small daily choices in a Akan / Ghanaian household, and how those choices accumulate into a different shape of life.

Wisdom is like a baobab tree; no one individual can embrace it.Akan

The Question This Post Is About

Two beauty-philosophies — one from Ghana, West Africa, one from Japan — with surprising agreements. The question is worth taking seriously, because Sankofa is one of those concepts that loses its shape when handled carelessly — and recovers it as soon as the reader is willing to slow down and listen.

There is a specific application of Sankofa that managers rediscover every few years and act surprised to find: the practice of asking, before any consequential decision, who has not yet been heard from. The question seems procedural. It is not. It is a small Sankofa act, repeated, that changes the temperature of an organisation over years. Every project begins by reading the postmortems of the previous three.

A Second Angle

The comparison is not symmetric. Sankofa did not develop in dialogue with the Western frameworks it now sits beside on a bookshelf. It developed inside Akan life, answering questions that Akan life kept posing. To ask whether Sankofa is "better than" individualism, or stoicism, or productivity culture, is to ask the wrong question. The right question is narrower and more useful: what does Sankofa see clearly that the framework I currently use does not? Every project begins by reading the postmortems of the previous three.

Where the Concept Resists

There is also the question of authority. Who gets to speak for Sankofa? The traditions in which it lives are old, plural, sometimes in disagreement with each other. Anyone — including the writer of this essay — who claims a definitive reading is overreaching. The careful reader treats every restatement of Sankofa, including this one, as one voice among many.

What to Do With This

What can you do with this? Begin small. Choose one place — one meeting, one relationship, one daily ritual — and run it through Sankofa for a month. Not as a project. As a quiet experiment. Notice what changes. Sankofa is not learned by reading; it is learned by repetition.

Sankofa: Learning from the Past to Build the Future by Amara Osei

The full philosophy, as a book

How to use your history, your failures, and your traditions as fuel rather than baggage.

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