Pacific Islander communal healing practices understood as collective devotion to restoring wholeness and honoring interconnection within family and community.
When a Pacific Islander community gathers to address conflict, grief, illness, or spiritual imbalance through circle processes and collective witness, they practice what Rabia understood as sacred devotion. Rabia's love was not abstract but relational—expressed through presence with others. Similarly, healing circles embody the principle that community is responsible for maintaining each member's wellbeing. The circle holds space, listens, shares burden, and collectively works toward restoration. This framework elevates healing circles from therapeutic technique to spiritual practice. Those who sit in circle are performing devotion—to each other, to ancestors, to the future generations who will inherit healthier relationships. Participants surrender ego, practice vulnerability, and prioritize collective healing over individual vindication. Understanding healing circles as devotional practice helps communities reclaim them as distinct from Western therapy, honoring how they root healing in relationship, reciprocity, and spiritual interconnection rather than individual processing.
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