Recognition that ancestors remain active participants in family and community life, offering guidance, protection, and a sense of eternal belonging.
For Rabia, the Beloved (God) was always present, closer than her own breath, shaping her every moment. Ancestor veneration across traditions rests on similar certainty: the dead are not gone but transformed, continuing to influence and inhabit the living world. In Day of the Dead celebrations, Latin American families welcome ancestors home; in African diaspora practices, ancestors guide and protect descendants; in Japanese Obon festivals, the dead return to family spaces. This ongoing presence is not haunting but belonging—the assurance that we are never truly orphaned, that our ancestors' love and concern continue shaping our lives. Rabia teaches that such presence is confirmed through direct experience and devotion, not through rational proof. By maintaining altars, speaking names, seeking counsel, and feeling their encouragement, descendants affirm that love transcends death and that family bonds form an eternal community.
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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