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Culture Shock and the Unspoken Rules of Hospitality

Why cultural relativism is a best practice approach to achieving and sustaining positive human interactions in your life

Cultural norms shape the way we see the world, often in ways we do not realize until they are challenged. I learned this firsthand when I visited an American friend’s home for dinner.

International experience with world food! Know more about Syria through Middle Eastern food!

In my Middle Eastern culture, hospitality is not just a practice. It is a sacred obligation. When guests arrive, food is not simply offered …it is insisted upon. To refuse is an invitation for further encouragement, a back-and-forth that reinforces warmth and generosity. That night, when I declined food at my friend’s house, I expected the ritual to begin. Instead, they simply nodded and continued eating.

The absence of insistence left me unsettled.

This experience illuminated cultural relativism, the sociological principle that no culture is inherently superior to another. Practices that seem natural or expected in one culture can feel foreign in another.

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Chicago Education Advocacy Cooperative
Chicago Education Advocacy Cooperative

Written by Chicago Education Advocacy Cooperative

Serving the needs of racialized and minoritized students in Chicago since 2020. www.chieac.org

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