A framework for honoring elders, mentoring youth, and understanding community work as a legacy passed across generations.
Rabia lived in relationship with students, peers, and learners across her lifespan, understanding knowledge and wisdom as belonging to a lineage. Intergenerational Devotion applies this to organizing by deliberately creating structures where wisdom flows multi-directionally. Elders are honored not as figures from history but as living teachers whose experience informs present strategy. Youth are welcomed as innovators and leaders, not as future leaders to be prepared someday. Middle generations intentionally bridge, learning from both directions. This addresses the "old guard versus new activists" dynamic that fragments movements. When organizing is understood as a legacy—something inherited from ancestors' struggles, something being stewarded for future generations—present conflicts take different shape. A disagreement about tactics becomes a conversation about honoring what previous generations fought for while adapting to current conditions. Intergenerational structures might include elder councils, youth co-leadership, formal mentoring, and explicit space for different generations to share their visions. This creates organizational resilience, deepens historical consciousness, and helps movements survive individual burnout.
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