AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONS
Empirical work related to African spirituality in the social sciences, particularly within the social work context, is sparse. It is crucial that practitioners have a deeper understanding of the beliefs and practices that can support therapeutic goals in practice. Using qualitative research methodol...
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Stellenbosch University
2020-12-01
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doaj-344a392bf45e43aab2f08d8e8c78ae242020-11-25T04:00:25ZafrStellenbosch UniversitySocial Work/Maatskaplike Werk2312-71982020-12-0156410.15270/56-4-882AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONSCharlene SinghRaisuyah BhagwanEmpirical work related to African spirituality in the social sciences, particularly within the social work context, is sparse. It is crucial that practitioners have a deeper understanding of the beliefs and practices that can support therapeutic goals in practice. Using qualitative research methodology, 20 child and youth care students at a selected university in South Africa, who are proponents of African spirituality, were interviewed with regards to their beliefs and practices. The major objective was to gain a richer insight into African spirituality and those African healing methodologies considered most relevant to child and youth care practice. Prayer to the ancestral spirits, sacrificial rituals and music were considered to be some of the most important practices identified that could guide both child and youth care practice and social work. https://socialwork.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/882african spiritualitybeliefsceremonieshealing methodologieshelping professionspractices |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
Afrikaans |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Charlene Singh Raisuyah Bhagwan |
spellingShingle |
Charlene Singh Raisuyah Bhagwan AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONS Social Work/Maatskaplike Werk african spirituality beliefs ceremonies healing methodologies helping professions practices |
author_facet |
Charlene Singh Raisuyah Bhagwan |
author_sort |
Charlene Singh |
title |
AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONS |
title_short |
AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONS |
title_full |
AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONS |
title_fullStr |
AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONS |
title_full_unstemmed |
AFRICAN SPIRITUALITY: UNEARTHING BELIEFS AND PRACTICES FOR THE HELPING PROFESSIONS |
title_sort |
african spirituality: unearthing beliefs and practices for the helping professions |
publisher |
Stellenbosch University |
series |
Social Work/Maatskaplike Werk |
issn |
2312-7198 |
publishDate |
2020-12-01 |
description |
Empirical work related to African spirituality in the social sciences, particularly within the social work context, is sparse. It is crucial that practitioners have a deeper understanding of the beliefs and practices that can support therapeutic goals in practice. Using qualitative research methodology, 20 child and youth care students at a selected university in South Africa, who are proponents of African spirituality, were interviewed with regards to their beliefs and practices. The major objective was to gain a richer insight into African spirituality and those African healing methodologies considered most relevant to child and youth care practice. Prayer to the ancestral spirits, sacrificial rituals and music were considered to be some of the most important practices identified that could guide both child and youth care practice and social work. |
topic |
african spirituality beliefs ceremonies healing methodologies helping professions practices |
url |
https://socialwork.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/882 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT charlenesingh africanspiritualityunearthingbeliefsandpracticesforthehelpingprofessions AT raisuyahbhagwan africanspiritualityunearthingbeliefsandpracticesforthehelpingprofessions |
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