Recognizing that child-rearing is a communal responsibility, where extended family, mentors, and community provide witnessing and support without replacing parental authority.
Rabia lived in a rich community of seekers and was embedded in networks of spiritual accountability and mutual care. She embodied the principle that growth happens in community, not isolation. In parenting, this wisdom opposes both extremes: the authoritarian isolation of parents who brook no outside input, and the neglectful diffusion where no one takes responsibility. Authoritative parenting welcomes trusted mentors, grandparents, and community into the child's life while maintaining clear parental leadership. The village supports but does not override the parents' guidance. This mirrors Rabia's model of the spiritual community as essential to personal development. Children benefit from multiple trusted adults who reinforce values and provide perspective. Parents benefit from witnessing and support that prevents the isolation and rigidity that feed authoritarianism. The child experiences belonging to something larger than the nuclear family.
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