Integrating ritual, song, prayer, and spiritual discipline into organizing spaces to deepen commitment and strengthen group bonds.
Rabia's spiritual tradition included daily devotional practices that ordered her life and connected her to something transcendent. Communities can weave similar collective practices into organizing work: opening meetings with grounding rituals, singing together, creating councils with ceremonial elements, or establishing seasonal gatherings that renew commitment. These practices serve multiple functions: they shift nervous systems from fight-or-flight to rest-and-digest, they create emotional containers for processing collective grief and anger, they signal that this work is sacred rather than merely strategic. Collective devotion practices also honor cultural and spiritual traditions of participating communities, making organizing spaces feel alive and soulful rather than sterile. They deepen the bonds between people beyond shared ideology, creating kinship.
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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