Intentionally connecting elders, adults, and youth through shared values and stories, ensuring movements carry forward collective memory and vision.
Rabia lived within a community of seekers across generations, each contributing their unique knowing to collective spiritual understanding. In organizing, intergenerational love means deliberately creating spaces where elders share hard-won wisdom, adults do current work, and youth bring vision and energy. This prevents movements from reinventing wheels, burning out young people without mentorship, or allowing elders' knowledge to die with them. Intergenerational structures include mentorship circles, oral history projects, youth councils that advise elders, and shared ritual that links past struggles to current action. When communities practice intergenerational love, they develop longer historical vision, deeper roots, and capacity to sustain work across decades. Young people inherit not just demands but ways of being together; elders witness their legacy continuing. Movements become living organisms that grow wiser and more resilient over generations.
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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