Using radical welcome and generous inclusion as a strategy for building power and expanding community boundaries.
Rabia's circle welcomed people across social boundaries, offering spiritual kinship to all. In organizing, hospitality becomes political: the decision to welcome people others reject, to include voices systems marginalize, to create space for those deemed undeserving. This practice expands the community's power by bringing in people others ignore—immigrants, formerly incarcerated people, unhoused neighbors, those with disabilities. Radical hospitality sends a message that everyone belongs, has gifts to contribute, and deserves dignity. It breaks isolation that systems rely on and creates networks spanning social divides. Organizers practice hospitality through simple acts—remembering names, asking about family, sharing food, translating language, providing childcare—that communicate deep respect. This softens people's armor and builds trust needed for sustained collaboration. Hospitality is not passive niceness but strategic inclusion that numerically strengthens movements, brings multiple perspectives to strategy, and models the inclusive world organizing seeks to create.
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