Spiritual practice of remembering ancestors through stories, songs, and rituals infused with love rather than obligation.
Memory work across cultures traditionally focuses on preservation and accuracy, but Rabia's devotional approach suggests transforming memory into an act of love. This practice involves gathering stories, songs, recipes, or wisdom from ancestors and engaging with them devotionally—singing their songs with feeling, cooking their recipes with gratitude, or sharing their stories with reverence. Rabia emphasized that how we remember matters as much as what we remember. When memory becomes devotion, it animates the past with living energy. This framework honors the emotional truth of relationships over historical exactitude. Across traditions—from griots in West Africa to Irish keening to Japanese ancestor storytelling—this practice acknowledges that ancestors live in our memories and through our emotional engagement with them. By infusing memory work with love, we prevent ancestors from becoming static historical figures and instead maintain them as active presences in our ongoing spiritual and communal life.
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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