The practice of passing spiritual capacity and devotional depth to younger organizers, not just knowledge and tactics.
Rabia mentored seekers through presence and example, transmitting not just teachings but spiritual maturity. Community organizing often focuses on tactical training: how to do research, run meetings, negotiate. These matter, but they're insufficient for movements that last. Experienced organizers can transmit something deeper: the spiritual capacity to stay grounded in purpose, to love difficult people, to maintain hope in dark times, to see organizing as sacred work. This transmission happens through relationship and modeling, not lectures. A young organizer watches how a veteran handles conflict without losing compassion. They notice how a seasoned activist maintains joy even when progress stalls. They experience how presence can shift a tense meeting. These observations penetrate more deeply than training manuals. Creating intentional structures for intergenerational transmission means veteran organizers treating mentorship as spiritual practice, not administrative burden. It means younger organizers seeking mentors not just for strategy but for spiritual formation. It means communities of practice where different generations learn together. When this transmission happens well, movements develop deeper roots across time. Each generation doesn't start from scratch rediscovering why they do this work; they inherit both wisdom and devotion from predecessors.
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