Conversation with children as sacred encounter where both parties are genuinely heard, not occasions for parental pronouncement.
Rabia's teachings came through dialogue, poetry, and direct address—forms that invited response and reflection rather than passive reception. In authoritarian parenting, communication flows downward: parent speaks, child listens and obeys. In authoritative parenting, rooted in Rabia's model, dialogue becomes spiritual practice. Parents ask genuine questions, listen to answers, and allow themselves to be changed by what they hear. This does not mean children have equal authority in decisions, but it means their voice is truly received. When a child expresses disagreement or fear, the authoritative parent inquires: 'Tell me more about what you're feeling.' This transforms conflict from a power struggle into an opportunity for deeper knowing. Rabia engaged with God as a partner in dialogue, not a distant ruler, and spoke to others with the expectation that they would meet her fully. Children raised in dialogue develop voice, confidence in their perceptions, and the ability to navigate relationships with honesty and nuance.
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