Rabia lived within community despite her mystical focus; her example shows how children develop ethics best when parental authority is witnessed and balanced by broader community.
Though remembered as a solitary saint, Rabia was embedded in community—she lived among people, taught disciples, and her spiritual authority was recognized and affirmed by others. This reminds parents that healthy authority cannot be exercised in isolation. Authoritarianism often thrives in secrecy and unquestioned control; authoritative parenting is transparent to community oversight. When extended family, friends, teachers, and mentors see how parents treat their children and can offer gentle accountability, children benefit from multiple perspectives and parents remain humble. Rabia's presence within community meant her spiritual authority was constantly refined through relationship; she was not infallible but was held accountable to the wisdom of the whole. Similarly, authoritative parents remain open to community input about their parenting. They do not hide their struggles or defensively reject outside observation. Children raised within this transparency learn that healthy authority is not threatened by accountability and that we all grow best in relationship. The community serves as mirror: it reflects back to parents when they are slipping toward authoritarianism, and it affirms when they are exercising genuine authority with love. This communal dimension transforms parenting from a private power dynamic into a shared practice of formation.
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