Ancestors exist in continuous present time through active remembrance, not confined to past, allowing lived connection across generations.
Rabia's mystical experience emphasized the dissolution of temporal boundaries in divine presence. Applied to ancestor veneration, this teaches that remembering is not passive recollection but active presence-making. When we speak an ancestor's name, share their stories, or embody their values, we invite them into the eternal now. This concept challenges the Western linear view of time that treats ancestors as finished, completed beings. Instead, it honors the living dimension of ancestral presence found in Yoruba tradition's concept of "ara orun" (spirit realm), Chinese ancestor veneration's belief in continued influence, and Indigenous practices where ancestors actively guide the living. Rabia's radical presence—her complete absorption in the moment of devotion—models how we might similarly collapse the distance between past and present through genuine remembrance that treats ancestors as presently active rather than historically concluded.
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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