The practice of acknowledging ancestral trauma and suffering while transforming it through compassionate love and intergenerational healing.
Rabia experienced slavery, poverty, and the pain of unrequited longing, yet transmuted suffering into radiant love. Ancestor veneration becomes profoundly healing when descendants acknowledge that their ancestors endured hardship, injustice, and grief. Rather than idealizing ancestors, this approach honors their full humanity and struggles. Many traditions now practice ancestor acknowledgment that includes this honesty: indigenous communities reckon with displacement; African diaspora communities honor those lost in slavery; immigrant families recognize sacrifices made in migration. Rabia's model suggests that love flowing backward through time can help heal ancestral wounds—descendants can witness ancestors' suffering, affirm their resilience, ask forgiveness where needed, and consciously choose to break cycles of harm. This creates what some call soul repair: when living descendants hold their ancestors with compassionate awareness, the healing reverberates across generations, releasing trapped pain and allowing ancestor wisdom to transmit more freely.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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