A contemplative practice of witnessing community members' needs, gifts, and struggles without the distortion of personal preference or bias.
Rabia taught that divine truth becomes visible when we learn to perceive without the filter of ego's preferences. In Sufi practice, becoming a fair witness means developing the capacity to see what is actually present, rather than what our attachments make visible. Applied to favoritism, fair witnessing asks: who in my community have I failed to really see because they fall outside my preference circle? Whose struggles remain invisible because they don't match my affinity groups? Whose gifts go unrecognized because they express differently than I expect? Fair witness is both a spiritual discipline and a practical tool. It requires slowing down, asking questions, and actively seeking perspectives outside our habitual networks. The cost of practicing fair witness is discomfort: we may discover that our preferred narratives omit important truths, that people we've dismissed possess unexpected gifts, that those we've overlooked have been suffering. This honest seeing is painful but necessary. It forms the foundation for transformed communities where nobody's reality is hidden by someone else's preference, where legacy includes all voices and all stories.
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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