Embracing bicultural or multicultural identity as a spiritual practice rather than a painful compromise, treating the capacity to hold multiple worlds as a gift.
For many people navigating assimilation, the experience feels like existing between worlds—not fully assimilated, not fully rooted in origin culture. Rabia's teaching reframes this: dwelling simultaneously in multiple worlds is itself sacred work. She held both the Qur'anic tradition and radical mysticism, both devotion and philosophical inquiry. Contemporary people holding multiple cultures are not failures at either; they are practitioners of a more complex belonging. This requires naming the real costs—translation exhaustion, feeling perpetually foreign, managing multiple social contexts—while also recognizing unique capacities: bridge-building between communities, bicultural literacy, ability to see multiple perspectives. When communities honor rather than pathologize this position, people can inhabit it with greater ease. The task becomes not choosing one world but developing skill and grace in moving between them, keeping each relationship alive and authentic. This reframes the assimilation conversation from loss/gain to something deeper: the spiritual practice of holding multiplicity with integrity.
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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