Contributing labor, resources, and time to collective good without calculating personal return or recognition.
Rabia exemplified selfless devotion, giving everything to service without attachment to outcome or recognition. In community organizing, this principle applies to leadership that works for collective liberation without expecting credit or career advancement. This challenges capitalist organizing models where leaders accumulate symbolic or material capital. True organizers in this tradition contribute their gifts—time, skills, relationships, resources—because the work itself is sacred, not to build personal brand. This doesn't mean self-erasure or exploitation; it means aligning personal fulfillment with community flourishing rather than personal gain. Communities recognize and trust leaders who sacrifice without expectation of return, understanding them as truly devoted to collective wellbeing. This principle also prevents the ego investments that distort organizing strategy. Leaders motivated by recognition often make campaigns about themselves rather than community power. By practicing sacrifice without expectation, organizers maintain clarity about whether decisions serve community or ego. This creates conditions for sustainable, ethical leadership that can weather failure and setback without collapsing because fulfillment isn't dependent on individual success.
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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