Reframing community care as spiritual practice and moral imperative, not charitable duty.
Rabia's devotional poetry speaks to the Beloved—God—with intimate tenderness and absolute commitment. Community organizers can translate this sacred relationship into how members relate to their community itself: as Beloved, worthy of absolute loyalty and care. This reframes community service from obligation or charity into genuine love-work. When organizers help members see their neighborhood as Beloved—something worth sacrificing for, worth showing up for despite hardship—commitment deepens. This concept dissolves the savior complex (where privileged outsiders 'help' communities) by centering community members as those most devoted to their own liberation. It transforms meetings, phone banks, and protest actions from tasks into acts of devotion. The Sufi tradition reveals how treating community as sacred Beloved creates enduring solidarity.
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