Welcoming the stranger and newcomer as sacred encounters, reflecting Rabia's inclusive love and community permeability.
Historical accounts show Rabia welcoming all—the poor, sick, and marginalized—with equal devotion, seeing the Divine in every being. This radical hospitality shaped her community ethic. In Sufi and Islamic tradition, hospitality isn't social nicety but spiritual duty—each guest carries traces of the Beloved. For intentional communities, this principle reframes how new members are integrated and how the community relates to the wider world. Communities that practice hospitality as spiritual discipline remain open, humble, and connected to fresh energy. They avoid becoming cloistered or self-satisfied. Hospitality requires vulnerability—newcomers challenge existing patterns and assumptions. Yet this disruption is essential: it prevents calcification and keeps communities alive. Rabia's model suggests training members in hospitality as a practice: genuinely listening to strangers, finding the sacred in difference, creating genuine welcome rather than performative inclusion. Communities that prioritize this practice remain adaptive, humble, and rooted in the expansive love that builds bridges rather than walls.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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