Rabia's circular gathering model applied to creating organizations where members both give and receive care, making legacy a mutual blessing.
Rabia led gatherings where all participants—master and student, rich and poor, man and woman—sat in circle, each contributing wisdom and receiving nourishment. Circles of Reciprocal Repair transforms the helper/helped binary that often distorts tikkun olam into charity. Instead of an economy where some repair and others receive repair, this model creates structures where everyone simultaneously gives and receives, teaches and learns, leads and follows. In Jewish legacy frameworks, this means elders are renewed by youth energy, experienced activists learn from newcomers' perspectives, and institutions benefit from the full participation of members across all demographics. This prevents the depletion of caregivers and the passivity of care receivers. Jewish tradition offers models: chevra kadisha (holy society) where all members share sacred work, and the principle that we are all responsible for each other. Legacy built through circles of reciprocal repair creates cultures where contribution is universal expectation, dignity is unconditional, and the work of mending becomes a gift that circulates rather than flows one direction.
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