Abstract
In this article, I draw attention to the value of community in John Mbiti’s
philosophy using his famous axiom by reconciling the tension between the
individual and community his philosophy envisages. To do this, I offer a
reconstruction of Mbiti’s communitarian axiom: “I am because we are; and
since we are, therefore I am.” Mbiti is considered one of the forerunners of the
communitarian debate in African philosophy. His axiom, which describes his
idea of Afro-communitarianism, accounts for the importance of individual and
community in thinking about social existence in African thought. However,
Mbiti’s argument for the direct influence of the community in the formation of
the individual is taken to mean the supremacy of the community over the
individual. Mbiti’s concept of community has implications for the idea of
personhood in that it raises the question of individual agency. This has affected
the reception of Mbiti’s contribution to the idea of community in African
political thought. While Mbiti’s contributions to Afro-communitarianism
transcend the discourse of personhood, I argue that maximising the potential of
his idea requires reconstruction and a critical analysis of his axiom. In doing
that, I demonstrate that a possible relationship exists between the “I” and “we”
in his axiom that represents a harmony between the community and individual
and does not suggest a primacy of either but the significance of community.
This analysis will enable fair engagement with Mbiti’s conception of
community.