Creating spaces and practices that actively include those who were never naturally favored, ensuring no one is permanently outside.
Every community produces its unchosen: the quiet person in the room, the outsider by culture or temperament, the person who missed the initial favored circle. Rabia taught that devotion means actively turning toward those we might overlook. This concept asks: how do we intentionally create belonging for those who weren't naturally preferred? It requires active architecture—inviting the quiet voice, noticing the newcomer, following up with those who dropped away. In communities rooted in Rabia's legacy, inclusion is not passive assimilation but active welcome. The cost of favoritism includes the loneliness of the excluded; healing requires deliberate practice. This might mean rotating who leads meetings, ensuring diverse voices shape decisions, or creating ritual that honors both the central figures and the margins. By practicing belonging for the unchosen, we refuse to let favoritism calcify into permanent hierarchy. We acknowledge that no person should remain perpetually outside, and we build the practices that make this real.
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