Most of what is written about Sawubona in English is wrong. Not maliciously — usually it is wrong because Sawubona resists translation, because the concept does not match neatly onto Western categories, because the writers are working with a sentence-long summary instead of a tradition. Sawubona in the Twenty-First Century? This essay is one attempt at a more careful answer.
What Sawubona Actually Means
Sawubona is the Zulu greeting commonly translated as 'I see you.' The traditional reply, 'Yebo, sawubona,' means 'Yes, I see you too.' But the greeting carries weight that 'hello' does not: to see someone, in the Zulu sense, is to acknowledge their full personhood — their history, their lineage, their presence in this moment. In modern leadership, customer experience, and personal relationships, sawubona names the discipline of being genuinely present with another person. This much is on Wikipedia and in introductory leadership books. What is harder to find — and harder to translate — is the texture of the concept: the way Sawubona shapes a thousand small daily choices in a Zulu / Southern African household, and how those choices accumulate into a different shape of life.
Until the lion learns to write, every story will glorify the hunter.African proverb
The Question This Post Is About
What Sawubona looks like now — in cities, online, and in workplaces far from Southern Africa. The question is worth taking seriously, because Sawubona 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.
Take the modern workplace as a test case. The dominant Western model treats the team as a coalition of individual contributors who happen to share a Slack channel — each evaluated alone, promoted alone, and let go alone. Sawubona starts somewhere different. It assumes that the unit of analysis is the team, that performance is co-produced, that to praise a single person without naming the people around them is a kind of category error. The implications are uncomfortable for managers trained in the Western model. Remote teams begin meetings with a short personal check-in, not a status update.
A Second Angle
The most concrete way Sawubona shows up in working life is in how a manager handles failure. The Western reflex is to find the responsible individual, document the failure, and move on. Sawubona insists on a slower, harder question first: what did the team make possible, and what did it fail to prevent? The shift sounds soft. It is not. Remote teams begin meetings with a short personal check-in, not a status update.
Where the Concept Resists
It would be dishonest to pretend Sawubona is uncomplicated. The concept can be — and has been — used to suppress dissent in the name of harmony, to extract unpaid labour from women in the name of community, and to soften criticism that should have been sharper. Any serious reading of Sawubona has to hold these uses in view. The concept survives the criticism. But it is not innocent.
What to Do With This
There is no certificate at the end of Sawubona. There is only the slow accumulation of choices made differently — meetings shaped differently, relationships tended differently, decisions weighed differently. The reward is not visible. The cost is real. Over time the difference becomes a kind of life.