Recognizing that authoritative parenting includes inviting trusted community into child-rearing, honoring interdependence over isolated family autonomy.
Rabia al-Adawiyya lived and taught within community, viewing spiritual growth as inseparable from relationships of accountability and mutual care. Her model rejects the illusion that parenting is a private, nuclear-family affair. Authoritative parenting incorporates Rabia's communal wisdom by remaining open to mentors, extended family, teachers, and community figures who reinforce values and provide alternative models. This differs from authoritarianism, which often isolates the family and centralizes parental power, and from permissiveness, which offers children no reliable structure beyond parents. Rabia's legacy suggests that children flourish when multiple trusted adults share in their guidance, each offering perspective and accountability. The parent remains primary, but not sole authority. This distributed authority prevents parental burnout, models healthy interdependence, and provides children with richer sources of wisdom. Community-embedded parenting also protects against authoritarian rigidity by allowing questioning and external perspective.
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