Creating community spaces where people belong first and ideological alignment develops later, welcoming those still discovering their values.
Rabia taught that love precedes understanding, that hearts open before minds align. In organizing, this manifests as building circles of genuine belonging where people of varied backgrounds, beliefs, and commitments can gather without passing rigid ideological tests. Traditional organizing sometimes gatekeeps based on doctrine or purity, alienating those who want to act but haven't fully formed their analysis. Belonging-first approaches welcome the uncentered, the ambivalent, and the newly awakened—understanding that participation itself develops consciousness. This principle particularly strengthens organizing in diverse communities where shared experience and mutual aid matter more than shared ideology. Such circles become genuine communities, not just campaign vehicles, creating deeper roots for sustained change.
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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