Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Practice of Radical Presence

Cultivating deep attentiveness to community members' full humanity, suffering, and dignity as foundational organizing work.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia was legendary for her undivided attention—she sat with people in their spiritual seeking without distraction or agenda, witnessing their struggles fully. This radical presence created transformation. In community organizing, radical presence means organizers show up to listen more than to speak, to understand before strategizing, and to honor each person's experience as valid data for collective analysis. This counters organizing cultures that move quickly through one-on-one conversations, extracting commitments without genuine relationship. Radical presence requires slowing down: sitting in people's homes, attending their celebrations and funerals, learning family names and histories, asking questions from curiosity rather than predetermined strategy. This slowness generates trust essential for vulnerable conversations about power and change. It also prevents organizers from imposing external agendas on communities, instead allowing strategy to emerge from people's lived knowledge. Rabia's example shows that transformation often begins not with perfect messaging but with one person feeling truly seen. When community members experience such presence, they become capable of extending it to others, creating ripples of dignified relationship throughout movements.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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