A healing framework where pure love and commitment become the tools for addressing historical harm, broken kinship, and fractured communities across time.
Rabia al-Adawiyya's devotion was radical precisely because it sought healing through love rather than through assertion of right or demand for recompense. Devotion as intergenerational repair applies this insight to the deep wounds carried across African generations: enslavement, colonization, forced displacement, and severed kinship. This framework proposes that sustained love—not as sentimentality but as fierce commitment to restoration—becomes the practice through which communities heal collectively. Present generations devote themselves to reconstructing fractured family lineages, recovering lost stories, and rebuilding trust between age groups. This is not forgetting but loving-through: honoring those harmed while working toward conditions where future generations inherit wholeness rather than trauma. The practice requires vulnerable accountability, patient presence, and sustained commitment. Through devotion, communities transform inherited pain into wisdom and create pathways toward intergenerational healing and genuine 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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