Pacific Islander death rituals understood as active devotion maintaining living relationship with deceased family members and ancestral presence.
Rabia spoke of annihilation in divine love—ego dissolving into communion with the Beloved. Pacific Islander mourning practices, particularly in Samoa and Tonga, involve elaborate rituals where the community gathers to sustain connection with the deceased. The extended mourning period (fa'alavelave) is not merely grief expression but active devotion—keeping the ancestor's memory alive, honoring their continued presence, and maintaining the spiritual bond. Through Rabia's framework, this becomes understood as a form of divine communion. The living serve the deceased through remembrance, storytelling, and ceremonial acts, much as Rabia served God through constant devotion. This perspective transforms grief from something to overcome into a sacred practice of continued relationship. It validates the spiritual necessity of lengthy mourning periods and honors how Pacific Islander cultures understand death not as ending but as transition requiring devotional maintenance.
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