Involving trusted community members in child-rearing as witnesses and guides, distributing authority and wisdom across loving relationships.
Rabia al-Adawiyya lived within a spiritual community where elders and peers shared in mutual guidance and support. This model offers an antidote to both isolated authoritarianism and permissive parenting. Authoritative parents recognize they cannot parent alone; they cultivate a circle of trusted mentors, teachers, extended family, and friends who reinforce values and provide additional secure relationships. This distributed authority creates redundancy: when one authority figure's guidance is questioned, the child has other loving voices echoing similar wisdom. Unlike authoritarian parenting, which centralizes power in parents, community-based parenting shares the responsibility while maintaining clear values. Rabia's tradition emphasizes that spiritual growth happens in communion with others. In contemporary parenting, this means deliberately building village structures—whether extended family, faith communities, or chosen families—where children experience multiple loving authorities committed to their flourishing. This strengthens resilience and belonging.
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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