Viewing each child as inherently worthy of unconditional love and belonging, which fundamentally reframes how adults establish language and play boundaries.
Central to Rabia's teaching was that every soul is beloved by the Divine. This paradigm shift transforms early childhood education: instead of seeing children as needing to earn acceptance through obedience, adults recognize each child's intrinsic belonging. When a child is held as already beloved, boundaries become expressions of protective love rather than punishment. A limit on aggressive language or unsafe play isn't imposed from above but offered as part of caring for the beloved child and the community. This paradigm particularly influences how adults respond to boundary violations: with curiosity about what the child needs rather than shame about their failure. Children ages 3-6 who experience themselves as beloved develop resilience, take responsibility for their words and actions, and view community rules as expressions of shared devotion rather than external control.
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