"This is a readable and highly stimulating volume. It will be of interest to those from a range of spiritual backgrounds, particularly those concerned to deepen the connection between spirituality and the transformation of society. Its central message, that the human spirit cannot be colonised, is powerfully and poignantly articulated." (Paul Hess, Black Theology, December 3, 2020)
1. Decolonizing Western Medicine and Systems of Care: Implications for Education
2. Is Decolonizing the Spirit Possible?
3. Spirituality and the Search for Home: The Complexities of Practicing Sikhism on Indigenous Land
4. Land and Healing: A Decolonizing Inquiry for Centering Land as the Site of Indigenous Medicine and Healing
5. Healing and Well-Being as Tools of Decolonization and Social Justice: Anti-colonial Praxis of Indigenous Women in the Philippines
6. Decolonizing Western Medicine and Systems of Care: Implications for Education
7. Blood Anger: The Spirituality of Anti-Colonial Blood-Anger for Self Defense
8. In my Mother's Kitchen: Spirituality and Decolonization
9. Reclaiming Cultural Identity through Decolonization of Eating Habits
10. A Journal on Ubuntu Spirituality
11. Shedding the Colonial Skin: The Decolonial Potentialities of Dreaming
12. Critical Spirituality: Decolonizing the Self
13. A Landscape of Sacred Regeneration and Resilience
14. Closing Dialogue on Decolonizing the Spirit with Dr. Njoki Nathani Wane and Kimberly L. Todd
15. Conclusion: The Politics of Spirituality: A Postsocialist View
Njoki Nathani Wane is Chair of the Department of Social Justice Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto, Canada. Wane’s research interests include African Indigenous knowledges, spirituality, anti-colonial, decolonial, and decolonization theory.
Miglena S. Todorova is Assistant Professor in the Department of Social Justice Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto, Canada. She is also the Director of the Centre for Media and Culture in Education at OISE.
Kimberly L. Todd is a PhD candidate in Department of Social Justice Education at the Ontario Institute of Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto, Canada. Todd’s research interests include teacher Praxis and education, decolonization, Indigenous epistemologies, dreaming, and spiritual knowledges.
This multidisciplinary collection probes ways in which emerging and established scholars perceive and theorize decolonization and resistance in their own fields of work, from education to political and social studies, to psychology, medicine, and beyond. In this time of renewed global spiritual awakening, indigenous communities are revisiting ways of knowing and evoking theories of resistance informed by communal theories of solidarity. Using an intersectional lens, chapter authors present or imagine modes of solidarity, resistance, and political action that subvert postcolonial and neocolonial formations. Placing emphasis on the importance of theorizing the spirit, a discourse that is deeply embedded in our unique cultures and ancestries, this book is able to capture and better understand these moments and processes of spiritual emergence/re-emergence.