Spiritual devotion becomes a collective discipline that strengthens communal bonds and transmits values across generations.
Rabia's life demonstrates devotion as disciplined practice, not isolated mysticism. In African ubuntu contexts, this concept translates devotion into communal ritual and shared responsibility. When families gather in devotion—whether through prayer, storytelling, or ceremonial practice—they enact intergenerational transfer of values and belonging. This framework suggests that sustained spiritual practice is how communities maintain cohesion across time. Devotion to ancestors through remembrance, to elders through respect, to children through investment becomes the infrastructure of ubuntu. Rabia's radical love for the Divine mirrors the radical commitment required to sustain community across generations facing economic pressure, diaspora, and cultural erosion. This concept reframes spiritual practice not as individual salvation but as collective survival and flourishing. It positions devotion as the answer to "how do we keep each other?" across time.
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