Understanding the classroom community as a living reflection of interconnectedness, where each child's development ripples through the whole.
Rabia taught that love dissolves the illusion of separation—all souls reflect the Divine and are therefore fundamentally united. This mystical insight transforms how Montessori and Waldorf educators understand community. Rather than community as a behavioral management tool or a means to social skills, it becomes the very substance of development. In Montessori's mixed-age classrooms, this framework reveals how an older child's mastery teaches a younger child not through instruction but through resonance—a living demonstration of possibility. In Waldorf's circle times and main lessons, community becomes the container in which each child's unique gift reveals itself through relation to others. Rabia's vision suggests that when educators create genuine beloved community, children naturally develop moral imagination and empathy not through lessons but through participation. The classroom becomes what Rabia experienced in her spiritual circle—a space where individual hearts beat in rhythm with collective purpose, and each child's growth is simultaneously everyone's growth, mirroring divine unity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.