Being fully present with community members' suffering and joy without attempting to fix, judge, or instrumentalize their experience.
Rabia's devotional practice emphasized radical presence—standing before the beloved in complete attention. Community organizers can apply this through deep listening circles where members' stories are witnessed without agenda. Sacred witness means showing up to funerals, celebrations, and struggles not as an organizer collecting data, but as a community member honoring shared humanity. This practice builds trust that cannot be manufactured through rhetoric or strategy alone. When people feel truly heard—their pain acknowledged, their wisdom recognized—they develop agency and voice. Sacred witness transforms the relationship between organizer and community from hierarchical to relational, creating space where collective wisdom emerges. This principle counters the extractive dynamics that plague many movements, replacing them with practices of genuine reciprocity and honor.
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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