A framework for understanding how love carries the responsibility to notice and correct favoritism, especially for those with power to influence it.
True love, in Rabia's tradition, is not sentimental or passive—it is accountable. When we love a community, organization, or family, we bear responsibility for its justice. This means actively noticing when favoritism takes hold and speaking up, even when it costs us. Parents who love their children equally must resist the pull to prefer the compliant or accomplished child. Leaders who love their organizations must examine how resources and recognition actually flow. Friends who love each other must name when some voices are centered while others fade. The cost of accountability is real: speaking against favoritism often means risking favor ourselves. It means appearing difficult or ungrateful. It means choosing integrity over comfort. Yet Rabia teaches that love without accountability is not love at all—it is mere sentiment. The accountability of love asks: who benefits from the favoritism in your circle, and who pays the price? What are you gaining by staying silent? How will you use whatever influence you have to build systems of equal regard? This is not anger or judgment but the sober recognition that love requires us to act.
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