The act of showing up, bearing witness, and inhabiting space as a form of resistance to erasure and marginalization.
Rabia's presence in her community—her embodied devotion, her refusal to hide her spirituality, her visibility as a woman spiritual teacher—itself constituted witness and resistance. In community organizing, presence as resistance means showing up physically to places and moments of injustice: community members sitting in at a city council meeting, people blocking gentrification, occupying public space, maintaining a vigil. It is the power of being seen and counting bodies and voices. Presence also means emotional and spiritual presence: showing up not just strategically but with full attention and care. In an age of digital distraction and virtual organizing, physical presence holds particular power—children and elders see that someone cares enough to show up in person, that the struggle is real and embodied. Presence as resistance also means refusing invisibility, taking up space those in power want to keep hidden, making visible what they want forgotten. This organizing principle honors that sometimes the act of refusing erasure, of insisting on being counted and heard, of taking up space in one's full humanity, is itself the work.
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