Building communities that extend belonging to the marginal, the stranger, and those others reject.
Rabia rejected the hierarchies of her time, teaching that all souls were equal in their capacity for divine love. Her radical inclusivity—welcoming the outcast, the condemned, the forgotten—offers a powerful model for intentional communities. Rather than communities that attract those who already belong to dominant groups, this principle calls for actively creating space for those historically excluded. Radical inclusion doesn't mean ignoring real conflicts or pretending difference doesn't exist; instead, it means the default position is welcome. Communities practicing this examine their implicit biases, their access barriers, and their assumptions about who belongs. They create explicit practices of welcome and work to repair when people have been wounded by exclusion. This transforms community from a club for the like-minded into a genuine ecosystem of diverse humans learning to love one another.
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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