Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Beloved's Gaze: Affirming Intergenerational Identity

The practice of reflecting back to each generation their inherent worth through consistent recognition, grounding identity in relational belonging rather than achievement.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia understood that divine love meant being truly seen and cherished by the Beloved. She taught that spiritual worth was inherent, not earned. In ubuntu intergenerational frameworks, this translates to the crucial practice of 'the beloved's gaze'—where elders and ancestors consistently reflect back to youth their essential value and rightful place in the family and community. Many African descendants carry internalized colonialism and racial shame because the world's gaze told them they were less-than. Intergenerational healing requires elders to consciously counter this with recognition and affirmation. A grandmother's unwavering belief in her grandchild's potential, an uncle's public acknowledgment of a nephew's growth, a community's celebration of youth—these gazes become mirrors through which young people learn their worth. This practice is particularly crucial because identity rooted in relational belonging is more resilient than identity rooted in individual achievement. When a young person knows they belong absolutely to their ancestors and their descendants, they can weather external rejection and material hardship. The beloved's gaze becomes the foundation of intergenerational psychological resilience.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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