The practice of cultivating felt sense of community with ancestors across time, fulfilling Rabia's emphasis on belonging within divine love.
Rabia understood love as creating belonging—a sense of being held within something vast and eternal. In ancestor veneration, intergenerational belonging means cultivating awareness that we exist within a continuum of presence. Our ancestors are not entirely separate from us; their teachings, traits, struggles, and victories live in our bodies, choices, and ways of being. This concept invites practices that strengthen felt connection: storytelling that brings ancestors alive, honoring their struggles and achievements, recognizing family patterns we inherit and transform. Across traditions, from Confucian ancestor altars to Indigenous smudging ceremonies, communities maintain cohesion through ancestral awareness. When we actively cultivate belonging across generations, we address modern isolation and fragmentation. We understand ourselves as links in a chain, responsible to both those before us and those who come after. This belonging offers meaning, guidance, and a sense of participation in something transcendent.
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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