Welcoming others fully despite differences in background, religion, culture, or history—creating space where multiplicity itself becomes the strength.
Rabia's circle included people of different theological perspectives, social classes, and life paths—united by love rather than uniformity. Diaspora found families often include people from different countries, religions, class backgrounds, and political histories. Rather than seeking homogeneity, this concept embraces multiplicity as spiritual practice. The found family becomes a laboratory where radical hospitality means genuinely receiving someone from a rival country, embracing religious difference, honoring different immigration statuses. This requires active practice—naming differences explicitly, creating space for conflict, resisting the pressure to become identical to belong. The strength emerges from the deliberate choice to stay in relation across what would normally divide. Such communities become models of post-national belonging and teach society what coexistence actually requires.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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