Intentionally passing wisdom, values, and practices to new generations ensures communities survive their founders.
Rabia explicitly taught her circle, preparing them to continue her work and embody her spiritual values after her death. This wasn't about building an institution bearing her name, but about ensuring the tradition's living continuation. For contemporary intentional communities, this principle addresses a critical vulnerability: many communities collapse when the founder departs or ages. Spiritual succession planning means identifying and mentoring people who will carry forward the community's deepest values, teaching them not just what the community does but why, not just the practices but the philosophy beneath them. This requires the founder's willingness to diminish gradually—to make decisions more collectively, to show younger members they're capable, to resist the urge to remain indispensable. Communities that practice this create resilience and honor what Rabia modeled: that the deepest legacy isn't a monument to oneself but the transformation of people who then transform others. In practical terms, it means deliberate mentoring, documentation of values and practices, rotation of leadership roles, and explicitly commissioning the next generation before crisis forces transition.
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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