Using Rabia's radical love as a model for consciously recovering and centering indigenous African values against colonial imposition and cultural erasure.
Rabia al-Adawiyya represented a profound Islamic spirituality rooted in African and Middle Eastern contexts—a love tradition often erased by Western presentations of "universal" spirituality. Similarly, ubuntu values were suppressed under colonialism, replaced by competitive individualism. Love as Decolonial Practice means intentionally recovering and celebrating African relational philosophies as superior alternatives to colonial frameworks. This means affirming ubuntu over individualism, collective flourishing over profit maximization, spiritual community over market competition. Intergenerational responsibility becomes decolonial work when we explicitly teach children African values, restore indigenous practices, and resist the constant seduction of colonial materialism. Rabia's unwavering devotion to spiritual truth over worldly approval illuminates how love becomes revolutionary: refusing assimilation, maintaining cultural integrity across generations, teaching youth that their African identity and ubuntu belonging are treasures, not deficits. This concept names intergenerational responsibility as cultural preservation and spiritual resistance.
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