We’re excited to welcome back Sheri of Engineering Ministries International for her final post of her invaluable three-part series on “cultural icebergs”–this time, evaluating collectivist vs. individualist societies.
EMI mobilizes architects, engineers, construction managers, and other design professionals–including those through an incredible internship program–to provide design services for those helping the poor. We’re talking water projects, hospitals, schools, orphanages, you name it. Meanwhile, they raise up disciples and trained professionals in-country.
Sheri applies these cross-cultural points poignantly to the elements of designing cross-culturally–but we believe you’ll find inescapable parallels to any cross-cultural work.
Hopefully it will help jumpstart real solutions for cross-cultural sensitivities, and help any culture manifest Jesus Christ according to its own cultural icebergs.
It may even reveal unseen obstacles to our presentation of the Gospel.
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It was morning in East Africa. A team of EMI designers disembarked from the landrover, excited to return to the site.
Last year they had come to survey the land and design the first building: phase one of a new hospital. The team had worked hard to give Moses, the ministry leader, a plan that was beautiful, practical, cost-effective.
Now they would see the fruit of their work.
Yet as they entered the construction site, their eyes met a surprise. The building floor level was some three feet higher than designed, necessitating stairs and a steep ramp.
Mike, the EMI project leader, was a civil engineer who had developed a good relationship with the ministry over the last two years. He turned to Moses with a questioning look.
Moses offered an explanation: “When we started construction, some friends of the ministry raised concerns about flooding.”
Over the week, the EMI team urged Moses to return to the original design. “The data from the survey and soil tests indicated that flooding will not be an issue. Raising the structure unnecessarily increases the cost. The steep, makeshift ramp will be challenging for patients.” Yet each time Moses politely deflected these attempts, deferring to other unidentified advisors.
In my first post, I introduced the cultural iceberg concept: An idea that culture exists both above the waterline and below.
Above the water is The What, or that which we can observe with our senses.
Below the water lies The Why, or the intangible, subconscious aspects of culture. These include attitudes, beliefs, expectations, values, and assumptions.
This greater mass of culture lies beneath the waterline, and we must go out of our way to recognize and understand it.
Culture specialists often explore a particular aspect of culture in terms of a spectrum or continuum of values (Hall; Hofestede; Storti).
These continua are useful tools for comparing the general values of one culture to another. My second article focused on communication: How words and context are used to communicate truth. In this final ‘Iceberg’ post, we’re looking at identity: How do I understand who I am?
Every person everywhere belongs to groups. At the very least, we all have family, ethnicity, and nationality.
The identity aspect of culture explores how much we look to our various groups for our sense of worth, social role, and security. How tight or loose are our social ties?
From birth onward, members of collectivist societies are integrated into cohesive in-groups that protect them throughout their lives in exchange for loyalty and service.
Within the collective, roles are clearly defined. The group tells the individual who they are and what they are expected to do.
Most people of the world live in collectivist cultures. This includes the vast majority of Asians, Africans and Latin Americans, as well as parts of southern and eastern Europe and several North American subcultures.
Individualistic society is the opposite. The interests of the person take priority and social ties tend to be flexible and impermanent.
North Americans and northern Europeans tend to be on the individualistic side of the spectrum.
A culture’s proverbs are often revealing expressions of its values:
No matter how stout, one beam cannot support a house.
Brothers and sisters are as close as hands and feet.
One piece of wood will not make a fire.
The chicken is never ashamed of its coop.
Live and let live.
To each his own.
To thine own self be true.
The squeaky wheel gets the grease.
These two ways of approaching and valuing identity naturally lead to different behavior.
In the workplace, collectivists tend to stick together. Often, children are expected to take up their father’s profession, and hiring is done from within the group. Salaries often go back into a communal fund, or those who earn more are expected to support those who earn less. There is often little separation between professional and personal spheres, since life is about caring for the group.
To the individualist, this “favoritism” or “nepotism” in hiring and the lack of control over “one’s own salary” can appear unethical or unfair.
Clear boundaries between work and home for individualists are considered essential and extended family have no particular right to “my” money. Moreover, loyalty between employer and employee remains only as long as the relationship benefits both parties. Changing companies and moving away from family to pursue a job are seen as legitimate ways to advance in life.
Friendship is also defined differently on the two ends of the spectrum.
When a collectivist person calls another a friend — i.e. a member of the in-group — the implications are deep and long-lasting. That friendship is expected to be permanent and sacrificial.
We could avoid many cross-cultural misunderstandings if we understand what friendship means within a culture.
On a short-term trip, for example, an individualist traveler may feel like he has made many new “friends”, while the collectivist host may see the visitors more as “contacts.” To call them friends would move them into an entirely new category with different expectations.
On the other hand, for an individualist, friends come and go relatively easily. Cordial interaction over a short span of time can be sufficient for an individualist to call another person a friend.
However, even if two people have been friends for many years, it is usually considered inappropriate to make large requests or ask very personal questions. Moreover, if one moves away or interests change, the friendship can fade without hard feelings.
With these ideas in mind, let’s take another look at Moses and Mike.
Though Mike provided Moses with expert advice and concrete data, Moses proceeded with the modified plans on the advice of others. Why? What was happening below the surface?
However, Moses the collectivist was using a different scale to weigh opinions. He valued his relationship with Mike and the expertise of the team. However,
In the end, Mike and the team would go home, but if Moses offended his in-group, their support of his ministry might be jeopardized.
As a skilled leader in his own cultural context, Moses was performing a balancing act behind the scenes, which Mike did not see or understand. As with so many cross-cultural interactions, what lies below the cultural waters is what really counts.
This post originally appeared at EMIworld.org, and is gratefully reprinted with permission.
Editor’s note, post-publication: You may find this fascinating (as related in the 19 April 2019 Galli Report, an email publication of Mark Galli, editor of Christianity Today).
Can you hear the collectivist values of Robert Cardinal Sarah, as he looks at the state of Western Christianity, and the effects of individualism?
Galli writes,
“You cannot mistake Guinean Robert Cardinal Sarah as someone who bargains with unbelief. Here’s his prophetic jeremiad on the state of Western Christianity. Sarah is a man who has informed my faith… Admittedly, he’s attracted to sweeping assertions and harshness, but woven into hard words are diamonds of truth that reveal the core issues of Western culture:
The spiritual collapse thus has a very Western character. In particular, I would like to emphasize the rejection of fatherhood. Our contemporaries are convinced that, in order to be free, one must not depend on anybody. There is a tragic error in this. Western people are convinced that receiving is contrary to the dignity of human persons. But civilized man is fundamentally an heir, he receives a history, a culture, a language, a name, a family. This is what distinguishes him from the barbarian. To refuse to be inscribed within a network of dependence, heritage, and filiation condemns us to go back naked into the jungle of a competitive economy left to its own devices. Because he refuses to acknowledge himself as an heir, man is condemned to the hell of liberal globalization in which individual interests confront one another without any law to govern them besides profit at any price.” (emphasis added)
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