A movement grounded in hxaro — the /Xam practice of giving that binds people across distance, generations, and time. We build leaders, schools, enterprises, and circles on one principle: give first.
Among the /Xam, hxaro is not barter. A gift moves into another's hands, and the return comes later — sometimes years later — carried back along a relationship kept alive across great distance.
The value was never in the object. It lived in the bond the exchange renewed: a web of trust and memory that held people together when the land was hard and the rains were far apart.
We build everything — institute, schools, enterprise, circles — on that same logic. Authority that circulates rather than accumulates. The string, re-woven.
"To lead is to keep the thread between people unbroken — to give in a way that asks the world to give back."
Reciprocity does not begin with an ask. It begins with a gift given freely, before anything is required in return. So we build the giving into the work itself — every exchange carries a gift forward.
Every paid programme funds a bursaried place. No one is turned from the fire for lack of means.
Research flows first back to the /Xam and Khoekhoe communities it came from — restored, never extracted.
Our frameworks, writing, and teaching are released freely — given before any fee is asked.
What a patron gives in, the movement gives on — visibly, into communities and circles.
Each is a way in. Together they form the web-work — woven, living, mutual labour.
Thought leadership and research that places Indigenous governance, Ubuntu, and Khoekhoe tradition as co-equal with Western theory.
The giving-and-belonging engine. Patrons and community contributors — recognised or anonymous — funding the commons.
Accredited education rooted in identity, dignity, and Indigenous knowledge — the movement's flagship public good.
Community enterprise and co-operative ownership — the work-and-calling revolution, where people truly share in what they build.
The safe intergenerational community system. How the movement becomes real among people: gather, learn, serve, reflect, return.
Not a donor wall — a living record of reciprocity across the whole web-work. Gifts given and gifts returned, in money, time, knowledge, and labour.
It tracks relationship, not debt. No one owes — but the web remembers. A funder sees their gift travel; a community sees what it gave and received.
The movement was founded by Earl-Djehuti //Kabbo Erasmus — a /Xam-ka !ei and Khoekhoe descendant of the Windvogel lineage, with documented connection to //Kabbo of the Bleek-Lloyd Collection.
Its legitimacy rests on two things at once: an unbroken cultural inheritance, and a body of teaching and research carried into universities and councils across South Africa, France, and the wider network.
For a programme, a partnership, a patronage, or a circle — reach out, and the thread begins.