Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Ceremony as Intergenerational Communication

Ceremonial practice as the primary language for speaking across generations, honoring what was, blessing what is, and inviting what will be.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Indigenous cultures preserved and transmitted seventh-generation wisdom primarily through ceremony—repeated, embodied practices that hold teaching in their structure and movement. Rabia's devotional practices were similarly ceremonial: repeated prayers, rituals of surrender, gathering circles that followed forms that connected her to saints and seekers across centuries. This concept identifies ceremony as the technology specifically designed for intergenerational communication. Ceremonies create containers where past, present, and future can meet; they are prayers in motion. When communities gather to perform seasonal ceremonies (planting, harvest, solstice, equinox), they are literally gathering with ancestors and descendants, speaking with them through synchronized action and intention. Rabia understood this through the Sufi tradition's ceremonial forms. For contemporary seventh-generation thinking, ceremony becomes essential infrastructure—not optional spirituality but the primary language in which generations can truly hear each other.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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Explored In These Journeys
Journey
The Examined Path Through Indigenous seventh-generation thinking
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