Using mentorship between older and younger community members as a primary vehicle for transmitting values, wisdom, and belonging.
Rabia al-Adawiyya learned from elder teachers and later mentored seekers, embodying the transmission of living wisdom through relationship. Montessori's multi-age communities and Waldorf's mentor-class model create natural spaces for this, yet this concept makes intergenerational mentoring explicit and central: the passing of knowledge, values, and stories becomes the heart of education. Older children guide younger ones not just academically but morally and emotionally, practicing Rabia's love as service. Teachers become elder mentors, modeling reflective life and continued growth. Community grandparents, artisans, and storytellers become curriculum partners. Legacy—the sense that one's learning and character will be passed forward—becomes tangible. Children experience belonging across time, understanding themselves as links in a chain of human wisdom. This practice addresses modern isolation while grounding education in the reality that humans grow through love-infused relationships with those both younger and older.
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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