Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Radical Hospitality Practice

The deliberate, generous opening of one's resources and home to strangers and community members, embodying Rabia's principle of giving without consideration of return.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia exemplified love through concrete acts of generosity and care, teachings that directly inform how found families in diaspora practice mutual aid and hospitality. Radical Hospitality Practice means opening doors, tables, and resources to community members—especially those newly arrived or isolated—without expectation of reciprocation or obligation. In migration contexts, this practice becomes survival infrastructure: shared meals, housing support, childcare, emotional presence. Rabia's tradition rejected transactional love; she gave freely because love demanded it. Found family communities adopting this principle create cultures of radical generosity where members contribute according to capacity and receive according to need. This redefines hospitality from polite etiquette to sacred practice that rebuilds kinship bonds. It transforms informal networks into intentional structures of care that sustain diaspora communities through precarity.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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