This article exposes an investigative process centered on inquiring into the meanings that tie into spirituality in the context of moral reparation among black women who are victims of sociopolitical violence in Colombia, who live and exercise their political leadership in conflict zones. demonstrating that spirituality in processes of moral reparation occupies a fundamental place in Afro-Colombian communities and that it is intrinsically linked to everyday life and is expressed through multiple collective processes that calm and alleviate the soul, but also restore that which gives meaning to life. The article, therefore, asks women's complaints about the need for a moral reparation that links their spirituality and gives a place from an ethno-reparative perspective to this.
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