Teranga and the Long-Standing Conflict

Teranga · Wolof / Senegalese

There is a particular way the word Teranga arrives in modern conversations. It is invoked, often, as a slogan — pinned to a wall in a corporate office, dropped into a leadership keynote, printed on a tote bag. Teranga and the Long-Standing Conflict? The slogan version of Teranga is easy to admire and easy to ignore. The actual concept, the one that has shaped Wolof / Senegalese life for generations, is harder. It demands more. And it is, I think, more useful.

What Teranga Actually Means

Teranga is a Wolof word that does not translate cleanly. The closest English approximation is hospitality, but it is hospitality elevated to a defining cultural virtue. It is why Senegal calls itself 'the land of teranga.' It is the reflex to feed a stranger, to seat them, to ask after them. In the modern world it is also a strategy — for sales, leadership, customer experience, and any practice that depends on people choosing to come back. 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 Teranga shapes a thousand small daily choices in a Wolof / Senegalese household, and how those choices accumulate into a different shape of life.

Hospitality is the first medicine.Senegalese

The Question This Post Is About

Two colleagues, ten years, one persistent disagreement. What Teranga does. The question is worth taking seriously, because Teranga 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.

Take a small, ordinary case. A team of nine. A project that was supposed to take a quarter is now in its second. The manager has the option to find a single person to assign blame to and to move on. The Teranga reading offers a different question: what did we, as a team, fail to make possible for the person carrying this work? Every meeting begins with one minute of acknowledgement before any agenda item. The case is not unusual. The reading of it, in the spirit of Teranga, is.

A Second Angle

Notice what the case is not asking. It is not asking who is to blame. It is not asking how to make the situation more efficient. It is asking what Teranga would have us do here, with these particular people, in this particular knot. Every meeting begins with one minute of acknowledgement before any agenda item. The discipline of asking the Teranga question — instead of the efficiency question, or the blame question — is what changes a working life over years.

Where the Concept Resists

There is a real risk in romanticising Teranga. The Wolof / Senegalese traditions that produced it have always also produced internal critics — voices warning against the misuse of communal philosophy to demand conformity, to silence the young, to protect bad behaviour by elders. The honest defender of Teranga keeps those critics at the table.

What to Do With This

If you are new to Teranga, the most useful place to start is not with a study or a course but with a question, asked of yourself, at the end of an ordinary day: who held me up today, and whom did I hold? Sit with the answer. Do not improve it yet. The concept will deepen on its own, repeated, over weeks. This is how Teranga actually enters a life.

Teranga: The Strength of Human Welcoming by Amara Osei

The full philosophy, as a book

The Senegalese philosophy of generosity as strategy — in business, sales, leadership, and life.

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