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The
Day of Meditation
(Siku ya Taamuli)
The last day of Kwanzaa is the first day of the
new year, January 1. Historically this has been for African
people a time of sober assessment of things done and things to do, of
self-reflection and reflection on the life and future of the people and
of recommitment to their highest cultural values in a special way.
Following in this tradition, it is for us then a time to ask and answer
soberly and humbly the three Kawaida questions: Who am I; am I really
who I say I am; and am I all I ought to be? And it is, of necessity, a
time to recommit ourselves to our highest ideals, in a word, to the best
of what it means to be both African and human in the fullest sense (Click
Here for the Odu Ifa meditation ). This Day of Assessment
or Day of Meditation is noted in the first-fruits
celebration of the Akan by J. B. Danquah. He states that the Akan have
one day during the first-fruits harvest in which they simply engage in
quiet reflection. "The idea on this (day) is to maintain a quiet,
humble and calm attitude with regard to oneself and towards one's
neighbors." It is thus a good time for reassessment and
recommitment on a personal and family level.
Closely related to this is an
activity also noted by both Danquah and Sarpong, the Day of
Remembrance of the ancestors or the Adae celebration.
We referred to it above as Akwasidae, but one could also use one of the
days of Kwanzaa to pay special homage to the ancestors those of the
national community and those of the family. And this Day of Remembrance
may also be a part of the Day of meditation or more precisely, The Day
of Assessment.
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