Integrating spiritual practices and rituals into organizing work, treating collective action itself as a form of sacred devotion and service.
Rabia's pure devotion involved constant remembrance and conscious presence with the Divine. Translating this into organizing means infusing meetings, actions, and campaigns with intentional spiritual practice. This might include opening gatherings with meditation, integrating song and poetry, or treating organizing work as sacred service rather than mere strategy. Devotional practice in collective action deepens people's commitment, creates psychological resilience against burnout, and builds community cohesion beyond task completion. When organizing becomes a spiritual practice, participants experience their work as meaningful and transcendent rather than transactional. This framework acknowledges that social change requires not just strategic thinking but transformation of the self and collective consciousness. It honors the sacred dimension of community work.
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