The practice of organizing work motivated by inner calling rather than recognition, status, or material gain, creating authentic community power.
Rabia famously rejected both fear of hell and desire for heaven, acting from pure love alone. Applied to community organizing, this means cultivating organizers and volunteers who serve their communities from intrinsic motivation rather than seeking credit, titles, or personal advancement. This model directly counters ego-driven leadership and creates space for collective decision-making and distributed power. When organizers release attachment to individual recognition, they become vessels for community wisdom and collective vision. This approach builds trustworthy movements where decisions serve the community rather than individual leaders, and where the work itself—not its recognition—becomes the reward. Such organizing creates resilient communities that function through shared purpose.
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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