Planning community campaigns with seven-generation thinking, focusing on what enduring structures and relationships you're building, not just immediate wins.
Rabia understood that love extends across time—her devotion was eternal, not transactional. Legacy Thinking applies this to community organizing by asking: what are we building that will outlast this campaign, this leader, this crisis? Rather than extractive campaigns that mobilize people for a single ask then disappear, legacy-focused organizing builds institutions, relationships, and traditions that strengthen community power across decades. This means investing in leadership development even when it slows current campaigns, creating governance structures that distribute power, documenting community history and wins, and building rituals that bind community across generations. Practically, it requires different timelines, funding models, and success metrics—moving from "how many people showed up to the meeting?" to "how many new community leaders emerged?" and "what decisions does our community now control that we didn't before?" Organizations practicing Legacy Thinking create more resilient communities because power is distributed, not concentrated in charismatic leaders. Rabia's centuries-long influence teaches that devotion to community thrives across time.
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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