There is a temptation, when writing about a concept like Teranga, to make it noble. To treat Wolof / Senegalese thought as if it were uncomplicated wisdom waiting for the modern reader to catch up. Teranga for Difficult Family? The honest answer requires resisting that flattery. Teranga is real philosophy. It has internal tensions. It can be misused. It still rewards close reading.
What Teranga Actually Means
The most commonly cited definition: 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. That sentence is true, as far as it goes. It is also incomplete. Teranga is held inside a wider Wolof grammar — a set of related concepts, social practices, and proverbs — that the standalone definition cannot carry.
Hospitality is the first medicine.Senegalese
The Question This Post Is About
Teranga doesn't pretend everyone is easy. What it offers when family is hard. 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.
Outside the workplace, Teranga reads differently — and harder. In a household, it is not a leadership philosophy; it is a daily, sometimes irritating, set of obligations. The phone call you owe. The message you have not answered. The relative whose problem is now your problem because no one else is closer. First-day hires are walked to lunch, not handed a checklist. Teranga does not let you opt out of these.
A Second Angle
If you take Teranga seriously at work, the first thing that has to change is the meeting. Not its agenda — its shape. Western meetings are optimised for speed and for the loudest contributor. Teranga is optimised for something else: for the quality of decisions that hold. First-day hires are walked to lunch, not handed a checklist. The trade-off is real. Meetings under Teranga take longer. The decisions also unstick less often.
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
What can you do with this? Begin small. Choose one place — one meeting, one relationship, one daily ritual — and run it through Teranga for a month. Not as a project. As a quiet experiment. Notice what changes. Teranga is not learned by reading; it is learned by repetition.
The full philosophy, as a book
The Senegalese philosophy of generosity as strategy — in business, sales, leadership, and life.
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