A practice of regularly examining whether organizing work flows from genuine love for communities or from ego, status, or external reward.
Rabia famously said she loved God with pure love, not from fear of hell or hope of heaven—her devotion was untainted by self-interest. Organizing communities can adopt pure intention discernment by creating regular practices where organizers examine their motivations: Why am I doing this work? Am I serving the community's vision or my own? Have I become attached to my leadership role? Am I pursuing status or genuine liberation? This requires honest self-reflection and community accountability. It can happen through mentoring relationships, affinity groups, or structured retreats where organizers examine their hearts. Pure intention discernment prevents the corruption that derails many movements when leaders become more invested in their positions than in community vision. It catches the moment when organizing shifts from service to self-serving. This practice honors the reality that humans are complex—ego and love coexist, and we need community to help us tend our hearts. Rabia's life demonstrates that this discernment is ongoing work, not one-time achievement. Communities that practice pure intention discernment stay grounded in their values and prevent the betrayals that emerge when individual ambition overtakes collective purpose.
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