Rabia's inclusive mysticism, which welcomed all beings, offers a counterbalance to teach children about choosing inclusion while respecting individual boundaries in play.
Though Rabia taught boundary-setting through sacred refusal, she also embodied radical inclusion: she welcomed the poor, the outcast, the despised into her spiritual community. For young children learning to navigate play group dynamics, this creates a creative tension: how do we exclude when necessary while maintaining a fundamental stance of inclusion? Rabia's answer was that true inclusion is not the absence of boundaries but the maintenance of dignity and belonging even in disagreement. When a child excludes a peer from a game ("We don't want you here"), the adult guided by Rabia's wisdom might not force inclusion but might ask: "How could they play with us in a way that works for everyone?" This language honors both the excluding children's autonomy and the excluded child's dignity. The practice becomes teaching children to see every peer as part of their "community of hearts" even when temporary play boundaries separate them. Language becomes the tool: instead of "You can't play," children might learn to say "This game is for three people, but you could start a different game and we'll join later." This integrates Rabia's fierce love for all beings with the legitimate boundary-work of early childhood.
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