Rabia's direct relationship with the divine bypassed religious institutions and male authorities, showing how belonging flourishes when it's not mediated by gatekeepers who demand conformity.
In Rabia's 8th-century Islamic context, women's spiritual authority was severely restricted, yet she cultivated an unmediated relationship with God that required no male permission or institutional approval. This act of devotion outside hierarchy fundamentally challenged what belonging meant. She belonged to a divine reality, not to a human system. This distinction illuminates a modern pattern: many people confuse belonging to a community with belonging within its formal power structure. True belonging can exist outside hierarchy. Fitting in often requires accepting someone else's authority over your truth. Rabia's example suggests asking: Do I need permission to belong here? If the answer is yes, you're fitting in. If belonging is intrinsic—rooted in shared values rather than granted access—then you truly belong. Communities that genuinely foster belonging create space for relationships that bypass their own formal structures.
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