The practice of raising children within visible community relationships, where parental authority is both witnessed and balanced by the presence of extended family and spiritual community.
Rabia lived and taught within tight-knit spiritual communities where individual devotion was inseparable from collective accountability. Her followers witnessed and supported one another's spiritual growth. In parenting, this concept challenges the modern nuclear family isolation that often enables authoritarian excess. Authoritative parenting recognizes that children thrive when parents are embedded in communities—grandparents, mentors, teachers, neighbors—who can offer perspective, support, and gentle correction. This collective accountability prevents any single authority figure from becoming tyrannical while strengthening the child's sense of belonging to something larger than the parent-child dyad. When extended family and community members actively participate in a child's upbringing, they provide diverse models of love and authority. Children internalize that rules come not from one person's will but from shared values of a caring community. This transforms parental authority from isolated command into relational guidance rooted in collective wisdom and mutual responsibility.
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