Rethinking Ubuntu: Beyond Tribal Consciousness to Radical Interconnectedness

Ubuntu, rooted especially in the Bantu-language traditions of Southern Africa and echoed in relational philosophies across the continent, has become one of Africa’s most influential contributions to global ethical reflection. Across African societies, related concepts express comparable visions of shared humanity and mutual responsibility.
In Botswana, the concept of botho, expressed in the saying motho ke motho ka batho— “a person is a person through other people”—emphasizes shared humanity, mutual respect, and social responsibility. Other Bantu-speaking peoples use related terms, such as unhu/hunhu in Zimbabwe, umunthu in Malawi and Zambia, and vumuntu in Mozambique.
Although these concepts emerge from distinct linguistic and cultural settings, they share an emphasis on relational personhood and communal flourishing. Ubuntu affirms that human identity is formed through relationships of mutual recognition and responsibility. As a relational philosophy, Ubuntu affirms that human identity is not formed in isolation but through relationship, mutual recognition, and shared responsibility. This vision gained global attention when it shaped South Africa’s peace and reconciliation process after apartheid, offering the world a language of healing beyond revenge.
Ubuntu is both a gift and a task: it invites us to ask continually whether the circle of our ‘we’ is wide enough.”
Yet invoking Ubuntu during the Truth and Reconciliation process did not fully resolve the injustices created by apartheid, since questions of justice, reparation, and land ownership remain deeply contested in South Africa more than three decades after apartheid formally ended in 1994.
Rich in meaning, ubuntu has often been invoked by African scholars, theologians, and writers as the moral energy animating African communitarian life. Yet I have often felt that ubuntu has been romanticized more than it has been made practically transformative in African thought, leadership, and daily life.
Instead of being presented as a demanding ideal toward which African societies—and humanity more broadly—must continually strive, ubuntu is often celebrated primarily as evidence of African genius and achievement. In practice, in many parts of Africa, ubuntu has too frequently remained an intra-tribal rather than an inter-tribal experience, both before and after colonial independence.
The formation of modern nation-states from diverse African peoples has exposed ubuntu both as a gift and a task.
As a gift, ubuntu presents communitarian responsibility as a foundation for human flourishing. As a task, ubuntu challenges all to constantly examine the scope of the “we” to ensure that those with whom one feels a sense of belonging are broad enough.
Unfortunately, across many African societies since independence, the “we” has often been interpreted narrowly to include primarily those who are near and dear to us. Those outside this circle are treated differently. This is at the root of tribal consciousness, which is easily manipulated by the political class and used to defuse issues of accountability, corruption, and state capture.
The limits of this narrow “we” became visible during Nigeria’s 2023 elections. Many Nigerians regarded the Obi-Datti presidential ticket as a possible break from the country’s established political order. Yet after Peter Obi won the presidential vote in Lagos, the gubernatorial campaign became increasingly shaped by ethnic suspicion.
The European Union Election Observation Mission reported that the Lagos gubernatorial campaign was dominated by divisive language of ethnic belonging and exclusion, while threats were directed against certain ethnic groups and intimidation disrupted voting. The episode showed how quickly questions of competence, accountability, and policy can be displaced by fear of the ethnic “other.”
If ubuntu means that the person becomes fully human through other persons, then the “other” cannot be limited to the familiar face of one’s tribe. The stranger, the minority, the migrant, the political opponent, the linguistic outsider, and the one without social power must also be included within the circle of moral concern. Only this wider collective consciousness can break through the constricting walls of tribalism and empower Africans to choose responsible leaders committed to the common good, justice, and the flourishing of all. Such a shift would not destroy ethnic identity; rather, it would purify it. Healthy cultural belonging can enrich a nation, but when belonging becomes exclusion, it ceases to serve life.
When belonging becomes exclusion, it ceases to serve life.”
This problem appears across many post-independence African societies, where tribal belonging still shapes who is trusted, promoted, protected, forgiven, or treated with suspicion. Following the 1994 African Synod, Pope John Paul II warned in Ecclesia in Africa that ethnic hostility and tribal opposition could undermine peace, social justice, and the common good while nurturing favouritism and nepotism (no. 49).
Yet three decades later, Church, political, and intellectual leaders have done too little to move ubuntu meaningfully beyond ethnic boundaries. Africans rightly cherish children and family-oriented cultures, but in practice, concern often remains strongest for children of one’s own tribe, language, village, or bloodline.
A child outside that circle may be loved in principle but excluded in practice. Exclusionary ethnic loyalty can become so powerful that people support an incompetent or oppressive leader simply because that leader belongs to their group. In such cases, moral judgment becomes captive to ethnic loyalty.
Though ethnic loyalty and white supremacy are not conceptually or historically identical, both share a dangerous moral logic: they shrink the circle of belonging and allow group loyalty to override the equal dignity of others.
The meaning and practice of ubuntu must therefore move beyond tribal consciousness toward radical interconnectedness among all Africans and, ultimately, all humanity, if Africa is to affirm her true identity and reclaim her self-determining agency. Ubuntu cannot remain a beautiful proverb recited at conferences, funerals, homilies, political rallies, and academic gatherings. It must become a concrete ethic that shapes institutions, governance, education, pastoral life, business practice, and the ordinary habits through which people encounter one another.
In an increasingly interconnected yet deeply polarized world, entrenched ethnic consciousness makes it difficult to recognize goodness, truth, talent, or leadership beyond one’s inherited boundaries”.
In an increasingly interconnected yet deeply polarized world, what is needed, then, is a shift in consciousness. Entrenched tribal consciousness makes it difficult to recognize goodness, truth, talent, leadership, or value beyond one’s own tribal boundaries. The protection and advancement of the tribe are prioritized over the shared use of resources and the collective efforts of all. Public goods become private benefits. Offices become ethnic trophies. National identity becomes secondary to inherited loyalties.
Public goods become private benefits. Offices become ethnic trophies. National identity becomes secondary to inherited loyalties.”
Yet the tension, division, fear, suspicion, and marginalization that tribal consciousness imposes on others also prevent members of the dominant tribe from feeling secure or advancing alone. No group can build a future on the humiliation, exclusion, or impoverishment of another group without also weakening the moral and social foundation on which its own future depends. As the Igbo saying goes, O ji onye na’ala ji onwe ya—the one who pins another to the ground is also on the ground. Both can rise only when the one holding the other down releases him.
A change in consciousness can begin to transform conduct, but it must also be embodied in institutions, policies, and public practices. For too long, tribal consciousness has kept Africa and Africans trapped in a “more-of-the-same” pattern while expecting different results. The continent cannot continue to lament corruption, weak institutions, poor leadership, violence, and underdevelopment while refusing to confront the tribal loyalties that often protect and reproduce these realities. A renewed ubuntu must therefore become a school of conversion: a way of learning to see the dignity of the person before the label of tribe, region, class, or language.
Concretely, a renewed ubuntu should shape interethnic civic education, require transparent and inclusive appointments within the Church, and guide the equitable distribution of public resources.
As long as Africans romanticize ubuntu without adopting it as a social ethic, the continent will struggle to build institutions that protect its children, distribute resources justly, and serve the dignity of all its peoples.
The task before Africa is not to abandon ubuntu but to deepen it, widen it, and liberate it from tribal captivity. Ubuntu ethics must inform how we educate children, choose Church leaders, distribute public resources, and exercise public office. Only then can ubuntu become not merely a memory of communal life, but a living force for justice, reconciliation, and human flourishing.