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On Belonging

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In an age of social isolation, what does it mean to belong?
Humanity is at an inflection point. Stress, disconnection, and increasing environmental degradation have people yearning for more than just material progress, personal freedom, or political stability. We are searching for deeper connection. We are longing to belong.

On Belonging is an exploration of the crisis of social isolation and of the fundamental human need to belong. It considers belonging across four core dimensions: in our relationships with other people, in our rootedness in nature, in our ability to influence political and economic decision-making, and in our finding of meaning and purpose in our lives, with lessons on how to create communities centered on human connection. 

A trailblazing advocate and thought leader on questions of social connectedness, Kim Samuel introduces readers to leaders around the world who are doing the work to cultivate belonging. Whether through sports, medicine, music, business, culture, or advocacy, the people and programs in this book offer us meaningful lessons on building a world where we all feel at home.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 11, 2022
      Samuel, the founder of the Samuel Centre for Social Connectedness, debuts with an innovative program for fostering community. She explores what it means to belong and argues that readers should strive to bring “principles of wholeness and connectedness into the realms of public policy, urban planning, education, healthcare, and community organizing.” The author identifies people, place, power, and purpose as the “four dimensions of belonging” and interviews a Mi’kmaq elder in Canada who notes that having a sense of place nurtures a feeling of responsibility toward one’s environment. Analyzing the theme of reciprocity in Wolfram von Eschenbach’s medieval poem about Parzival and the Grail quest, Samuel outlines the “three core principles” of compassion: accepting difference in others, fostering connectedness with those different from oneself, and holding “everyone’s life in high regard.” She examines cultures that have successfully created a sense of belonging and details her trip to the Japanese village of Ōgimi, the residents of which live remarkably long and healthy lives while possessing “a strong sense of connectedness, rootedness in the natural world, self-reliance, and ongoing life purpose.” The author’s interviews with a diverse roster of interlocutors, including Syrian refugee Nujeen Mustafa and London architect Dominic Richards, offer captivating profiles of what connection and community look like in action and effectively model the kind of cross-cultural relationships she encourages readers to develop. This compassionate journalistic treatise on building more inclusive communities hits the mark.

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  • English

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