The framework that honors shared loss and mourning as legitimate foundations for collective action rather than obstacles to overcome.
Rabia expressed profound longing and grief in her devotional practice, transforming sorrow into devotion. Communities often organize from grievance without processing actual grief. This approach invites organizers to create ritual space for mourning—losses to violence, displacement, environmental destruction, stolen futures. When communities collectively grieve what has been taken, something shifts. The shared acknowledgment of pain creates unexpected cohesion. Grief organizing recognizes that sustainable movements require processing collective trauma, not just strategizing resistance. Organizations that build in grieving practices—memorial actions, storytelling circles, songs of lament—report deeper bonding and greater clarity about values. Members connect to why this work matters emotionally, not just intellectually. This approach also prevents the numbing that comes from relentless struggle. By honoring grief as legitimate and central, communities access both the motivation that sorrow provides and the resilience that comes from having truly felt and witnessed loss together.
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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