An economic practice within community where resources flow based on need and capacity rather than exchange, embodying Rabia's principle of love without return.
Rabia's devotion existed outside market logic—her love was given not to gain but to give. Communities can instantiate this principle through gift economy practices where members contribute skills and resources according to capacity and receive according to need, without systematic accounting. This contrasts with both capitalist exchange and traditional barter. A gift economy requires high trust and assumes abundance thinking: if I give freely, I trust the community will provide for my needs. Practically, this might include skill-shares where expertise is offered freely, community food systems based on surplus-sharing, or care networks where help flows to whoever needs it. Gift practices strengthen bonds because they establish genuine interdependence and mutual obligation rooted in care rather than contract. This economic framework transforms community from a collection of consumers into a web of givers and receivers, reflecting the deeper truth that we sustain each other.
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