Understanding that people can only develop collective power when they experience genuine belonging and being fully known in community.
Rabia's spiritual path centered on belonging—union with the Beloved that was complete and unconditional. This insight transforms how communities approach organizing: before people can effectively exercise power, they must experience belonging—being known, valued, and held by their community. Belonging is not earned through contribution or performance; it's foundational. Many organizing efforts fail because they demand action and commitment from people who haven't experienced authentic belonging. The Rabian approach inverts this: first create conditions of belonging through welcome, care, celebration of people as they are, and protection from shame. Once people experience belonging, they naturally contribute to and defend their community. Belonging also means being known in complexity—not just as activists or workers, but as full human beings with dreams, fears, histories, and humanity. Communities organized around belonging as foundation become more stable, more joyful, and paradoxically more powerful because people organize from commitment rather than obligation.
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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