The practice of creating space for collective mourning and processing loss as essential to community healing and movement sustainability.
Rabia's spiritual teachings held space for suffering and sorrow as part of the journey toward divine union. She understood that grief connects us to our deepest humanity. Community organizers can create intentional practices around collective grief—mourning people lost to state violence, environmental destruction, or displacement. This differs from either denying pain or becoming paralyzed by it. Instead, grief rituals acknowledge what's been taken while recommitting to struggle. Collective grieving releases the isolation many community members carry alone. It prevents the false positivity that disconnects organizers from the actual stakes of their work. Creating space for grief also honors the emotional reality organizers navigate—loss, anger, fear. When movements ritualize grief, people can move through it rather than being unconsciously driven by it. This spiritual practice deepens organizers' understanding of what they're fighting for while building compassionate communities where all emotions are held with dignity.
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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