A relational practice where organizers accompany communities as equals rather than saviors, honoring their own wisdom and agency in liberation work.
Rabia's approach to spirituality was intimate and relational; she spoke of walking alongside the Beloved rather than approaching as a servant seeking favor. This distinction is crucial for community organizing ethics. The savior complex—where organizers position themselves as experts who will rescue communities—replicates the same hierarchies that oppression creates. Being with, not for, means organizers approach communities as co-learners, recognizing that those most affected by injustice possess deep knowledge about solutions. This practice requires radical humility: listening more than speaking, following community leadership, and trusting the wisdom of collective experience. It shapes every aspect of organizing—from how agendas are set to how credit is shared. When organizers can let go of the need to be heroes, they become conduits for community power rather than obstacles to it. This also protects against the isolation and burnout that come from carrying the weight of change alone, distributing that burden across the whole community.
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