Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Repentance and Restoration: Undoing Favoritism's Damage

The practice of acknowledging favoritism's harm, making amends, and rebuilding trust—Rabia's path of transformation applied to communal healing.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia taught that transformation is always possible, that spiritual practice includes honest acknowledgment of failure and committed change. This offers a path forward for those who recognize they've participated in favoritism. Repentance here isn't shame or self-flagellation but clear-eyed recognition: I have favored some people over others. I have used my power to benefit those close to me. I have disguised preference as merit. I have damaged trust. From that acknowledgment comes restoration: changing practices, redistributing attention and resources, making space for those previously excluded, listening to those harmed by favoritism. This is harder than maintaining the status quo, but it's the only path to rebuilding community. In families, it means a parent explicitly acknowledging favoritism to all children and demonstrating changed behavior. In organizations, it means reviewing decisions for bias, correcting injustices where possible, changing systems that enable preference. In movements, it means building structures that distribute power rather than concentrate it. What makes this work is combining accountability with genuine care—not performing repentance but becoming someone different. Rabia's example shows this is possible, costly, and necessary. Without it, favoritism's damage compounds across generations. With it, community can genuinely heal.

Helpful guides
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Parenting & Community
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