Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Beloved Community and Class Dissolution

Rabia's inclusive spiritual circles as a model for communities where class markers dissolve and belonging is unconditional and economic barriers become irrelevant.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia's gatherings drew together the wealthy and the poor, the educated and illiterate, united by devotion rather than status. In her beloved community, economic hierarchy was subordinate to spiritual alignment. Applied to parenting and family life, this concept imagines reconstructing community—extended family, neighborhood, religious or secular groups—around values of unconditional belonging rather than consumer capacity. A beloved community in this sense creates spaces where children develop identity and security independent of family purchasing power. Parental stress diminishes when children's belonging is assured through community covenant rather than individual consumption. Class anxiety loses grip when neighbors, elders, and peers affirm a child's worth independent of brand names or material markers. Rabia's model suggests that the antidote to financial pressure's psychological toxicity is not individual family abundance but collective reimagining of what constitutes wealth and status. Communities built on spiritual or values-based belonging create genuine safety nets—material, emotional, and relational—that no individual paycheck can provide.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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