Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Disinterested Action in Campaigns

Organizing initiatives motivated by love of justice itself rather than personal gain, organizational growth, or recognition, creating authentic power.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia famously rejected both fear-based and reward-based spirituality, seeking only to love the divine for its own sake. In community organizing campaigns, disinterested action means pursuing justice and community wellbeing without attachment to credit, growth metrics, or personal advancement. This challenges the nonprofit industrial complex tendency to measure success by funding raised or members enrolled. Instead, organizers ask: are we serving genuine community needs or feeding institutional ego? Disinterested action doesn't mean lacking strategy or effectiveness—rather, it means the strategy serves the community's liberation, not the organization's expansion. This principle builds trust because communities sense when they're genuinely valued versus instrumentalized. It also creates surprising effectiveness: when organizers release attachment to predetermined outcomes, they can respond more authentically to emerging community wisdom. Campaigns rooted in disinterested action tend to build deeper power because participants feel chosen for their humanity, not harvested for their utility.

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