True presence exists beyond physical location; departure can deepen rather than diminish spiritual connection.
Rabia taught that the Divine is simultaneously everywhere and nowhere, closer than the jugular vein yet infinitely transcendent. This paradox applies to leaving community: physical departure does not necessitate spiritual absence. In contemporary terms, presence can be maintained through intentional remembrance, prayer, periodic return, and genuine inquiry about others' wellbeing. This concept inverts the common assumption that leaving means forgetting or ceasing to care. Someone who leaves consciously often becomes a clearer mirror for the community—no longer embedded in daily dynamics, they can see and reflect back what the group is becoming. They become an 'external witness.' Conversely, those who leave while maintaining spiritual presence through love and attention create a different kind of bond: one freed from dependency, obligation, and proximity-based resentment. Rabia's radical focus on inner connection suggests that the spiritual bonds formed in community are not terminated by geographic separation but can actually be purified of ego-entanglement by it.
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