Ujenzi and the Job You Don't Want to Take? It is the kind of question that admits of two answers — a quick one and a true one. The quick answer is that Ujenzi means building. the patient, communal craft of constructing something — a wall, an institution, a life — that outlasts you. The true answer takes longer, because Ujenzi is not really a concept; it is a way of seeing.
What Ujenzi Actually Means
Translators usually settle on something like: Ujenzi is the Swahili word for 'building' or 'construction,' and like many such words it carries more than its literal meaning. To do ujenzi is to be engaged in the long, communal, often unglamorous work of putting one stone on another until something stands. It is the antidote to the modern startup mythology of the heroic founder. It names the way real things — schools, neighbourhoods, marriages, careers, character — actually get built: slowly, with many hands, over time. It is a defensible translation. But translation is the surface. Ujenzi carries underneath it a set of assumptions — about what a person is, what owes what to whom, and what success even means — that the English sentence cannot deliver.
The patient man eats ripe fruit.Yoruba
The Question This Post Is About
Walking through a real career choice using Ujenzi as the question. The question is worth taking seriously, because Ujenzi 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 a small, ordinary case. A team of nine. A project that was supposed to take a quarter is now in its second. The manager has the option to find a single person to assign blame to and to move on. The Ujenzi reading offers a different question: what did we, as a team, fail to make possible for the person carrying this work? Documentation, onboarding, and internal systems are treated as the foundations of the building. The case is not unusual. The reading of it, in the spirit of Ujenzi, is.
A Second Angle
Notice what the case is not asking. It is not asking who is to blame. It is not asking how to make the situation more efficient. It is asking what Ujenzi would have us do here, with these particular people, in this particular knot. Documentation, onboarding, and internal systems are treated as the foundations of the building. The discipline of asking the Ujenzi question — instead of the efficiency question, or the blame question — is what changes a working life over years.
Where the Concept Resists
It would be dishonest to pretend Ujenzi 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 Ujenzi 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 Ujenzi. 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.