Prioritizing children's sense of secure belonging in community over achievement in language or play milestones, trusting that belonging fuels all development.
Rabia rejected performance-based spirituality; her path centered on belonging to the Divine beloved. In early childhood education, this translates powerfully: prioritizing a child's sense of secure belonging over language performance, vocabulary milestones, or play sophistication. A child who feels deeply belonging in their community will naturally engage language, explore boundaries, and develop social skills. Conversely, a child performing language skills while feeling unseen develops hollow competence. For 3-6 year olds, the question becomes: Does this child know they belong here? Are they witnessed as beloved? Do their words matter because they speak them, not because they use correct grammar? When community prioritizes belonging, children relax into authentic language use, honest boundary-setting, and genuine play. They stop performing and start being. Rabia's legacy invites us to ask: Are we measuring the right thing? The child who falters linguistically but feels secure in community will thrive; the fluent child who feels unseen will struggle.
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