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Clinical dances with the divine, spiritual and cultural

The intersection of African Traditional Medicine and modern mental health in SA

Monday, August 25 2025

Each year, from 26 to 31 August, we observe African Traditional Medicine Week — a powerful reminder that healing in Africa has always been more than medicine in a bottle or a prescription from a pharmacy.

For many of us, healing starts in the home, in ritual, in community, and in deep spiritual connection. As both a clinical psychologist and Igqirha, a Xhosa divine healer, I have come to understand that mental wellness in Africa cannot be fully supported without acknowledging the value of African traditional medicine and spirituality.

Why African Traditional Medicine matters
ealing systems to address physical, emotional, and spiritual challenges. These systems include the use of medicinal plants, spiritual divination, ancestral rituals, and the strength of communal support. For many, traditional medicine is not ‘alternative’ – it is the first and most trusted form of care.

Unfortunately, over the years, traditional healing practices have often been dismissed or viewed with scepticism in mainstream medical settings. Yet, in my clinical work, I see how many patients quietly seek help from both health facilities and spiritual healers, such as amagqirha, izangoma, prophets, and abantu bomoya, those commonly referred to as traditional healers, for support because both hold value in different ways.

In South Africa’s current mental health landscape, one of the greatest opportunities we have is to integrate African wisdom with modern clinical approaches. This integration does not mean replacing one with the other – it means recognising how they can complement each other to heal more fully.

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Igqirha and Clinical Psychologist -Anele Siswana

 

As a clinician, I use scientifically grounded methods like talk therapy, trauma counselling, and diagnostic assessments. As an igqirha, I also understand the deep importance of ancestral callings, spiritual unrest, and cultural rituals in shaping a person’s wellbeing. These are not just ‘beliefs’, they are the lens through which many understand their suffering, their healing, and their sense of self.

In one example, a young man I once worked with was struggling with recurring dreams, panic attacks, and unexplained physical pain. In the clinical setting, this could be diagnosed as anxiety or even psychosomatic distress. But through an African perspective, we also explored whether his dreams held spiritual meaning or signalled a deeper calling. Rather than choosing one path over another, we worked together to find a healing pathway that respected both his mental health and his spiritual identity.

Towards a more inclusive healing model
We need to ask ourselves as clinicians, ‘What does healing look like for the average South African?’. For many, it is not just about getting a diagnosis; it is about feeling seen, heard, and spiritually aligned.

 

This is where holistic and culturally sensitive care becomes essential. Patients shouldn’t feel that they have to choose between a hospital and their family’s healing traditions. Health professionals, particularly in mental health, need to become more open to understanding the cultural and spiritual dimensions of illness.

At facilities like Netcare Akeso, where mental health support is a priority, I believe this conversation is more important than ever. We serve a diverse nation with a deep connection to tradition, and our clinical spaces need to reflect that reality.

Here are some starting points that could help to bring the clinical and traditional worlds closer:

  • Ask openly: Encourage patients to share if they are using traditional medicine or seeing a healer. This fosters trust and reduces stigma.
  • Train with cultural insight: Health professionals should be offered workshops or talks on African healing practices, not to become healers themselves, but to gain a deeper understanding and respect for the role these practices play in people’s lives. Workshops or talks on African healing traditions can open eyes and deepen empathy.
  • Collaborate respectfully: Where appropriate, consider ways to refer or collaborate with trusted traditional practitioners when patients request it.
  • Be curious, not critical: Language like ‘superstition’ or ‘unscientific’ can shut down meaningful conversations – instead, humility and genuine interest invite meaningful exchange and learning.

African Traditional Medicine Week reminds us that Africa has always possessed healing knowledge, and that this knowledge remains alive in our families, elders, and healers. By embracing both the scientific and the spiritual, we can create care systems that are not only effective but truly rooted in our identity as a people.

As someone walking in both worlds, my vision is clear: healing is not ‘either/or’. Instead, it can be ‘both/and’. The future of mental health in South Africa lies not in silos, but in the power of integration, where clinical wisdom and traditional knowledge walk hand in hand.

Let us honour our ancestors, our clinicians, and most importantly, our people, by making space for both science and spirit in how we care for one another.

Ends

About the author
Anele Siswana is a clinical psychologist whose work bridges the intersections of African psychology, spirituality, and decolonial thought. With a multifaceted identity as a qualified clinical psychologist, Xhosa divine and spiritual healer (Igqirha), and academic, Anele advocates for an African-centred approach to mental health and human wellbeing. In his private practice and consulting work, he focuses on integrative models that bring together clinical intervention and indigenous healing practices.

About Netcare Akeso
Netcare Akeso operates a network of private inpatient mental health facilities and is part of the Netcare Group. Netcare Akeso provides individual, integrated and family-oriented treatment in specialised inpatient treatment facilities, as well as certain outpatient services, for a range of psychiatric, psychological and substance use conditions. Please visit www.akeso.co.za or contact [email protected] for further information.

In the event of a psychological crisis, call 0861 435 787, 24 hours a day for emergency support. Psychiatrist consultations can be made through Netcare appointmed™, online at www.netcareappointmed.co.za or by calling 0861 555 565.

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