Original Research - Special Collection: VukaniBantuTsohangBatho - Spirituality of Black Liberation

A white theologian learning how to fall upward

Jakub Urbaniak
HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies | Vol 78, No 3 | a7893 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v78i3.7893 | © 2022 Jakub Urbaniak | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 30 June 2022 | Published: 14 December 2022

About the author(s)

Jakub Urbaniak, Department of Historical and Constructive Theology, Faculty of Theology and Religion, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa

Abstract

As a theologian coming from Europe, a ‘postcolonial import’ into South Africa, it is my white privilege in particular that continues to queer my understanding of a social revolution on which our future, as a people, may depend. In this article, I seek to turn my personal experience of grappling with my whiteness into the source of my reflection. Drawing inspiration from fallism – a recent student movement that inscribes itself into a larger decolonial ‘struggle against the globalised system of racist capitalism’ – I ponder what it could mean, in the South African context, for whiteness to fall upward (Rohr). Here, the metaphor of ‘falling upward’ as a kenosis of whiteness is considered specifically with regard to a white theologian’s (my own) attempt to open spaces that could be filled with blackness.

Contribution: This auto-ethnographic essay inscribes itself into a transdisciplinary study of theology and race from both socio-cultural and religiospiritual perspectives. The author’s personal reflections, inspired by his own engagement with the fallist narratives and his ever-evolving attitude towards the blackness–whiteness binary, as experienced in the South African social and academic contexts, are shared as a means to crack open the societal and theological (notably Christian) imagination, both of which appear to suffer from a serious crisis.


Keywords

whiteness; blackness; race; fallism; theology; South Africa; kenosis

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