The Warrior Inside Each of Us
This is one of several HR Doctor
articles stemming from an amazing trip to South Africa and
time spent in the Zulu homeland. Besides meeting many new
friends and learning a great deal about public administration
in South Africa, other highlights of two weeks in Africa stood
out.
HR
Daughter Elyse poses with the Shakaland Zulu village
chief during the familys trip to South
Africa.
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One
in particular, of course, is the amazing animal life
inhabiting the large game reserves. Three days spent in the
Ehluhluwe-Umfolozi Game Reserve led to more than a thousand
photos, a greatly enhanced appreciation for nature and the
critical importance of environmental protection.
The
fact that I was accompanied by the beautiful HR Daughter
Elyse, as well as the amazing HR Spouse Charlotte, helped
reinforce that particular sense since Elyse works as a senior
manager for a Broward County, Fla.s Environmental Protection
Department.
Another major highlight was all
that I learned about Zulu culture and history. The Zulu are a
spirited as well as gentle and kind people. They also have a
strong military history and pride in their past as a warrior
nation.
Each individual young man who
learns the traditional ways of his forefathers learns the
importance of the basic weaponry in the Zulu arsenal: the
cowhide shield, the short stabbing spear and a club called the
knobkerrie. They also a learn the importance of when the
warrior spirit should pop out versus when quieter and
reverential interactions with other people should
dominate.
Within each of us, whether we
come from Zululand or from Brooklyn, rural California or North
Carolina, there is a warrior persona. That warrior persona is
marked by understanding the importance of sticking up for your
beliefs and not simply being a follower, especially down a
path or with a policy you feel is wrong.
The
warrior within us involves being an individual proud of who
you are and where you came from, but also being open to
co-operation with others and participating in the successes of
groups. The warrior persona involves becoming adept at various
skills including our professional skills as well as our
hobbies. It means being a willing teacher and a role model of
professional, humane behavior towards other people. The noble
tradition of the Zulu warrior kept that society together even
in the face of overwhelming British and Boer colonization and
dominance.
Anyone familiar with the movie
Zulu Dawn is aware of the defeat in the late 1870s of
more than a thousand professional British soldiers equipped
with the Her Majestys latest Martini Henry rifles by the army
divisions of the Zulus, known as Impis. Those Impis and their
tactics crushed a modern army and successfully, for a while at
least, defended a homeland against invasion.
The
British Empire decided that it would not accept the risk of
another battlefield failure after its major defeat at
Isandwanda and brought in "weapons of mass destruction," such
as Gatling guns. Even the great Zulu warrior tradition on the
battlefield couldnt prevail against machine guns.
However the tradition of pride,
personal strength of character and the importance of being a
balanced person remain present in the traditional Zulus we
met. This heritage means not only learning to be a
well-seasoned individual but also being able to be a strong,
committed team member. These are noble characteristics from
which every society and every workplace can learn.
I
saw no sign that in modern South Africa workplace issues were
resolved by spears, shields and clubs, but I saw many examples
of struggles being addressed constructively, respectfully and
with a common sense of purpose and spirit.
The
lesson for all of us as employees as well as members of the
community, family members and individuals, is to realize that
we too have a "warrior" inside ourselves. Allowing that
warrior spirit to display the character traits of the noble
committed warrior can help each of us become more respectful
and assertive at the same time. "Respectful assertiveness,"
backed by strong presentation skills and practiced
communications with others, can help us be identified early in
our careers as people marked for success at work and in
life.
Many of the habits present in our
"more modern" society aim at suppressing that individual
warrior spirit. Fashion trends, hours spent each day watching
television, declining civic engagement, loss of emotional
intelligence at critical times and walking by troubles instead
of addressing them are all symptoms of the repression of the
noble warrior spirit within us.
As
leaders in government and in our individual organizations, it
would not hurt at all to deliberately think about how to help
someone you know become more assertive and engaged by helping
them release their own warrior in a constructive
way.
Phil Rosenberg The HR
Doctor http://www.hrdr.net/
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