Islamic and Sufi ethics treating the stranger and guest with the same dignity as kin, a practice that directly counters the nepotism and in-group bias underlying favoritism.
Rabia lived in a tradition where hospitality to the stranger carried spiritual weight equal to caring for family. This wasn't mere politeness but a theological stance: the stranger you refuse might be an angel, a test, or simply another human whose claim on compassion is absolute. Favoritism violates this ethic by creating an inner circle whose members matter more than outer rings. In organizations, families, and communities, this manifests as nepotism—resources flowing to the connected while the qualified outsider is overlooked. The cost accumulates: institutions become corrupt, resentment spreads, and those favored often lack the competence their position demands. Rabia's practice required actively cultivating the same warmth for the unknown person as for the beloved friend. This means examining: whose voices get heard in your community? Whose needs are considered? Do you move toward strangers with curiosity or suspicion? The guest-stranger principle suggests that belonging itself expands only when we remove the hierarchy between insider and outsider, recognizing each person's fundamental equality before the Divine and before conscience.
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