Ancestor veneration as the foundational practice for establishing identity, safety, and communal belonging across generations.
For Rabia, belonging to the Divine through love was the ultimate security. Extended to ancestral practice, belonging continuity recognizes that our ancestors provide ontological grounding—they answer the fundamental question 'where do I come from?' and 'to whom do I belong?' In fractured modern societies, many suffer from profound disconnection. Ancestor veneration becomes the remedy: reconnecting to those whose blood, culture, values, and struggles form our foundation. This framework particularly serves diaspora communities seeking roots, adoptees seeking both heritage and chosen family, and anyone navigating identity questions. Japanese ancestral altars remind family members of continuity; African griot traditions maintain communal belonging; Jewish genealogical practice reconnects scattered families; Indigenous smudging ceremonies ground people in specific lands and lineages. When we actively venerate ancestors, we affirm: I belong to a lineage, I carry forward something precious, I am not isolated or accidental. This practice provides psychological and spiritual security essential for healthy individual development and community coherence.
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