The principle of service to community and future generations without expectation of personal reward or recognition, sourced from Rabia's paradigm of selfless love.
Rabia's famous teaching—"I love God not from fear of Hell or hope of Paradise"—established devotion stripped of transaction. Applied to intergenerational responsibility, this becomes the ethical foundation for ubuntu: elders work for children's flourishing without expecting gratitude or material return; individuals sacrifice for community continuity without demanding recognition. This concept directly opposes the economic logic of modern capitalism, which measures value in personal profit. Instead, pure devotion asks: what service can I give to my lineage simply because I belong to it? What can I build for descendants I will never meet? Rabia's model shows this isn't burden but liberation—when you release the need for return, you also release resentment. African intergenerational systems historically thrived on this principle: grandmothers teach granddaughters not for payment but for continuity; men provide for extended family not for status but for belonging. This concept restores moral legitimacy to sacrifice and reframes it as the highest form of love.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.