Rabia's practice of loving all beings equally without preference, offering an antidote to favoritism rooted in ego attachment rather than divine truth.
Rabia al-Adawiyya taught that true love transcends distinction—that the divine sees all souls with equal light. Her impartial gaze challenges favoritism as a symptom of spiritual myopia, where we elevate some people based on utility, appearance, or kinship rather than recognizing shared humanity. When we practice seeing others through Rabia's lens, favoritism loses its justification. The cost of playing favorites isn't merely social injustice; it fractures the heart's capacity for genuine communion. Rabia's tradition suggests that breaking favoritism requires retraining perception itself—learning to recognize the beloved in the seemingly ordinary, the stranger, the difficult person. This isn't naive universalism but a disciplined spiritual practice that expands the circle of our authentic care and dissolves the false hierarchies ego constructs.
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