The practice of treating every community member as beloved and essential, dissolving insider-outsider boundaries while maintaining collective boundaries.
Rabia transcended the masculine-dominated religious authority of her time by claiming direct relationship with the divine—a radical inclusion of the marginalized into sacred space. In organizing, this means creating cultures where every participant—regardless of background, education, disability status, or prior experience—is treated as carrying essential wisdom and belonging. Sacred othering means moving past superficial diversity practices to genuinely center those most impacted by systems being challenged. This requires intentional accessibility, leadership development across difference, decision-making processes that honor multiple ways of knowing, and accountability when belonging is threatened. Practices might include interpretation and childcare, adaptation for different learning styles, and explicit anti-oppression agreements. Communities practicing radical inclusion report greater resilience (diverse perspectives strengthen strategy), deeper ownership (people know they matter), and more sustainable power (built on solidarity rather than hierarchy).
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