Creating sacred space to collectively mourn losses and heal trauma as essential organizing work, not separate from it.
Rabia's devotion included lament—deep feeling of longing and loss in service of transformation. Communities under siege experience ongoing losses: deaths from violence and neglect, displacement, cultural erasure, stolen futures. Traditional organizing often pushes past grief toward action. Instead, grief rituals—memorials, lamentation ceremonies, storytelling circles—can be central organizing practices. These rituals acknowledge that liberation work is inseparable from healing. When communities create space to collectively mourn, they move grief from individual isolation to shared experience, which is neurologically and spiritually healing. Grief rituals also strengthen bonds as people witness each other's love through tears. They transform trauma from private shame into shared testimony. In movements led by people carrying historical and ongoing trauma, grief rituals prevent burnout and compassion fatigue by honoring what's been lost and what's at stake. This practice makes organizing more humane and sustainable.
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