Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Sacred Play and Embodied Devotion

Play and artistic expression as direct pathways to love and belonging, not mere development or distraction from serious learning.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia's teachings emphasized direct experience of divine love through surrendered presence, not abstract knowledge. This mirrors Waldorf's insistence that imagination and artistic work are pathways to truth, and Montessori's recognition that sensory exploration leads to understanding. When children engage in purposeful play, artistic creation, and movement with full presence, they experience what Rabia called the annihilation of self in something greater. In Waldorf classrooms, painting, music, and rhythm aren't added enrichments but sacred practices that align the child's being with universal principles. In Montessori, the child's focused work with materials becomes a form of meditation, a devotional act. This framework reframes play not as developmental stage to outgrow but as permanent access to belonging and meaning. The child who paints, builds, or dances with full heart touches something transcendent, discovering community with others engaged in the same devoted attention.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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