Cultural Fusion vs Appropriation: Creating Ethical Syncretic Practice
By NICOLE LAU
Introduction: The Line Between Fusion and Theft
You're drawn to practices from multiple cultures. You want to honor your diverse heritage, or you've studied different traditions and want to integrate what resonates. But you've also heard about cultural appropriation and don't want to cause harm.
Can you ethically blend practices from different cultures? Where's the line between respectful cultural fusion and harmful appropriation? And how do you create a syncretic practice that honors sources rather than exploiting them?
This guide explores the difference between cultural fusion and appropriation, the ethics of syncretic practice, how to approach cross-cultural spirituality respectfully, and practical guidelines for creating your own integrated practice with integrity.
Defining Terms
Cultural Fusion/Syncretism
Syncretism is the blending of different religious or cultural traditions into a new, integrated practice. It's been happening throughout history as cultures meet and influence each other.
Examples
- Santería: Yoruba religion + Catholicism
- Vodou: West African traditions + Catholicism + Indigenous Taíno
- Hoodoo: African traditions + European folk magic + Indigenous practices
- Buddhism in different cultures: Adapts to local traditions
Cultural Appropriation
Cultural appropriation is taking elements from a culture—especially a marginalized culture—without permission, understanding, or respect, often for profit or aesthetic purposes.
Key Elements
- Power imbalance (dominant culture taking from marginalized)
- Lack of permission or understanding
- Stripping context and meaning
- Often for profit or trend
- Source community doesn't benefit
The Crucial Differences
Cultural Fusion (Ethical)
- Permission: Invited or welcomed by source culture
- Understanding: Deep study and context
- Credit: Acknowledging sources
- Respect: Honoring original meanings
- Reciprocity: Giving back to source communities
- Humility: Recognizing you're a guest
- Relationship: Ongoing connection with source culture
Cultural Appropriation (Harmful)
- Taking without permission: No invitation or consent
- Superficial engagement: No deep understanding
- No credit: Claiming as your own or universal
- Disrespect: Distorting or trivializing
- Exploitation: Profiting while source community doesn't
- Entitlement: Believing you have right to everything
- Extraction: Taking and leaving, no relationship
Historical Context Matters
Syncretism Born of Necessity
Enslaved People's Syncretism
- African people enslaved in Americas
- Forbidden to practice their religions
- Hid their deities behind Catholic saints
- Created new traditions (Santería, Vodou, Candomblé)
- Context: Survival under oppression
Colonized People's Syncretism
- Indigenous people forced to convert
- Blended Christianity with traditional practices
- Preserved culture through syncretism
- Context: Resistance and survival
Syncretism of Choice vs. Necessity
- Necessity: Oppressed people preserving culture
- Choice: Privileged people picking and choosing
- Different ethical weight
Power Dynamics
- Who has power matters
- Dominant culture taking from marginalized: Appropriation
- Marginalized blending for survival: Syncretism
- Mutual exchange between equals: Cultural exchange
When Is Syncretism Ethical?
Your Own Heritage
Multiple Cultural Backgrounds
- If you have ancestry from multiple cultures, you have a claim to those traditions
- But: Ancestry alone doesn't equal cultural knowledge
- Still need to learn and connect with communities
- Respect that you may be an outsider to practices you have genetic connection to
Diaspora and Disconnection
- Many people are disconnected from ancestral cultures
- Reclaiming can be complex
- May need to learn as an outsider even to your own heritage
- Community connection is key
Invited Participation
Open Traditions
- Some traditions explicitly welcome outsiders
- Buddhism generally accepts converts
- Some Hindu teachers welcome students
- Wicca and modern paganism are open
- Key: Respect the tradition's own boundaries
Personal Invitation
- Teacher or community invites you
- Initiation or formal acceptance
- Ongoing relationship and accountability
- Not just reading a book or taking a workshop
Deep Study and Relationship
Not Just Superficial
- Years of study, not weeks
- Learning from practitioners within the tradition
- Understanding context, history, and meaning
- Ongoing relationship with source community
Accountability
- Teachers or community to hold you accountable
- Willingness to be corrected
- Listening when told you're doing harm
Red Flags for Appropriation
Warning Signs
- Closed practice: Source community says it's not for outsiders
- No permission: You haven't been invited or taught
- Superficial engagement: Weekend workshop, not years of study
- Cherry-picking: Taking appealing parts, ignoring the rest
- No credit: Not acknowledging sources
- Profit: Making money from others' culture
- Ignoring voices: Dismissing when source community objects
- Entitlement: "Spirituality is universal, I can do what I want"
Specific Practices to Avoid
- Smudging: Specific Indigenous ceremony, not generic smoke cleansing
- Sweat lodges: Sacred Indigenous ceremony, often closed
- Claiming to be a shaman: Specific to Siberian cultures, not a generic term
- Ayahuasca tourism: Extractive, often harmful
- Bindis as fashion: Hindu religious/cultural symbol
- Native American headdresses: Sacred, earned items
- Voodoo dolls: Racist stereotype, not actual practice
Creating Ethical Syncretic Practice
Step 1: Explore Your Own Heritage First
- What are your ancestral traditions?
- European folk magic, Christian mysticism, etc.
- Build foundation in what's yours by heritage
- You may find what you're seeking there
Step 2: Identify What Draws You and Why
- What specifically attracts you to other traditions?
- Is it aesthetics or substance?
- Can you find similar practices in open traditions?
- Examine your motivations honestly
Step 3: Research Thoroughly
- History and context of practices
- Is it open or closed?
- What do practitioners from that culture say?
- Read books by people from that culture
- Understand before practicing
Step 4: Seek Proper Teachers
- Learn from people within the tradition
- Not just books or white teachers
- Pay them fairly
- Build real relationships
Step 5: Get Permission
- Explicit invitation or initiation
- Community acceptance
- Not just assuming it's okay
- Respect when told no
Step 6: Give Credit and Context
- Always acknowledge sources
- Explain cultural context
- Don't claim practices as your own invention
- Educate others about origins
Step 7: Give Back
- Support source communities financially
- Amplify voices from those cultures
- Stand against discrimination they face
- Reciprocity, not just extraction
Step 8: Stay Accountable
- Ongoing relationship with teachers/community
- Willingness to be corrected
- Listen when told you're causing harm
- Adjust your practice accordingly
Examples of Ethical Syncretism
Personal Syncretic Practice
Example: Mixed Heritage
- Person with Irish and Japanese heritage
- Studies both Celtic and Shinto traditions
- Learns from teachers in both
- Integrates practices from both ancestral lines
- Acknowledges both sources
- Ethical because: Own heritage, proper study, credit given
Example: Initiated Practitioner
- Person initiated into Santería
- Also practices witchcraft from European heritage
- Keeps practices separate or blends with guidance from elders
- Maintains relationships with both communities
- Ethical because: Proper initiation, ongoing accountability
Historical Syncretic Traditions
- Santería, Vodou, Candomblé: Born of necessity, created by practitioners
- Hoodoo: African-American tradition, created by community
- Christo-Paganism: When done by individuals for themselves
- Buddhist adaptations: Buddhism adapting to local cultures
Common Justifications and Why They Don't Work
"Spirituality Is Universal"
- Claim: All spiritual truth is universal, so I can practice anything
- Problem: Universal principles ≠ universal access to specific practices
- Reality: Practices are cultural, even if underlying truths are universal
"I Was Called to This"
- Claim: The spirits/deities called me, so it's okay
- Problem: Feeling called doesn't override cultural boundaries
- Reality: Seek proper initiation if truly called
"I Have Ancestry"
- Claim: DNA test shows ancestry, so I can practice
- Problem: Genetics ≠ cultural knowledge or community acceptance
- Reality: Still need to learn and connect properly
"I'm Honoring the Culture"
- Claim: My practice honors the culture
- Problem: Honor means respecting boundaries
- Reality: If people from that culture say it's not okay, listen
"It's Just Appreciation"
- Claim: I'm appreciating, not appropriating
- Problem: Appreciation doesn't require participation
- Reality: You can appreciate without practicing
When Cultures Say No
Respecting Closed Practices
- Some practices are closed for good reasons
- Sacred knowledge not meant to be shared
- Requires specific lineage or initiation
- Cultural survival depends on boundaries
How to Respond
- Accept it: Don't argue or find loopholes
- Respect it: Honor their boundaries
- Find alternatives: Open practices that serve similar purposes
- Support from outside: Ally without appropriating
It's Not About You
- Not everything is for everyone
- That's okay
- There are plenty of open practices
- Respect is more important than access
Building Your Own Syncretic Practice
Principles
- Start with your own heritage
- Learn deeply, not superficially
- Get proper permission and teaching
- Give credit always
- Support source communities
- Stay accountable
- Respect boundaries
- Be honest about what you're doing
What It Might Look Like
- Foundation in your own heritage
- Practices from traditions you've been properly taught
- Clear acknowledgment of sources
- Ongoing relationships with teachers/communities
- Giving back to source cultures
- Willingness to adjust when corrected
- Humility about being a student
Conclusion: Respect Over Entitlement
Cultural fusion and syncretism can be beautiful, meaningful, and ethical—when done with permission, understanding, and respect. But entitlement to other people's cultures is appropriation, no matter how you dress it up.
Key principles:
- Permission matters—invitation, not assumption
- Context is essential—deep study, not superficial sampling
- Credit your sources—always acknowledge origins
- Power dynamics are real—dominant taking from marginalized is different
- Respect boundaries—closed means closed
- Give back—reciprocity, not extraction
- Stay accountable—ongoing relationships and willingness to be corrected
- Your own heritage first—build foundation in what's yours
You can create a rich, meaningful, syncretic practice that honors multiple traditions—if you do it with integrity. That means doing the work: years of study, proper teachers, community relationships, giving credit, supporting source cultures, and respecting boundaries.
Cultural exchange has always happened and always will. But exchange requires mutual respect, not entitled taking. Fusion requires relationship, not extraction. Syncretism requires humility, not appropriation.
Build your practice with integrity. Honor your sources. Respect boundaries. And remember: not everything is for you, and that's okay.
NICOLE LAU is a researcher and writer specializing in Western esotericism, Jungian psychology, and comparative mysticism. She is the author of the Western Esoteric Classics series and New Age Spirituality series.