The principle that parental and gender roles emerge from pure love rather than social obligation, making chosen responsibility more authentic than enforced expectation.
Rabia al-Adawiyya taught that true devotion flows from love alone, not fear or duty. In parenting and gender roles, this means the most sustainable and fulfilling approach to "who does what" begins with genuine love for those we care for. Rather than asking what society demands a mother or father should do, we ask: what does love call us to do? This reframes parenting not as a list of obligations but as an expression of belonging and connection. When both parents act from love rather than role scripts, children experience authenticity. Gender roles become flexible because love doesn't follow rigid prescriptions—it adapts to real needs, relationships, and individual gifts. Rabia's legacy invites us to examine whether our parenting choices arise from genuine love or inherited pressure.
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