Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Kinship Beyond Blood

Building chosen family and fictive kinship structures within communities that provide belonging, material support, and mutual care like biological family.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia lived outside traditional family structures and created deep spiritual kinship through her teaching and relationships. Kinship beyond blood in community organizing means intentionally creating family-like bonds and mutual care systems within organizing groups. This includes practices like collective childcare, shared housing, financial mutual aid networks, and ritual marking of life transitions (births, deaths, breakups, health crises). Such kinship structures are not metaphorical but material and relational. For people marginalized by biological families due to sexuality, immigration status, poverty, or disability, organizing communities that function as family provide essential survival infrastructure. This practice also strengthens commitment: people fight harder for chosen family than for abstract causes. It redistributes care and labor more equitably, particularly supporting members with caregiving responsibilities. It creates cultural continuity and celebration of identity. Rabia's model illuminates how spiritual community can fulfill family functions. Organizing groups practicing kinship beyond blood develop stickier participation, more equitable distribution of labor, and cultural practices that honor members' full humanity. This is especially powerful in movements led by people of color, queer people, and other communities whose biological families may not affirm their liberation work.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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