Recognizing and celebrating a child's biological, cultural, and spiritual origins as sacred elements of their identity—a form of reverence.
Rabia lived within Islamic tradition while transcending its literalism, honoring both roots and personal spiritual truth. Adoptive parents can apply this to their child's origins: respecting biological family, cultural heritage, and spiritual traditions not as obstacles to assimilation but as sacred parts of the child's wholeness. This concept resists the historical erasure of adoptees' backgrounds and instead frames connection to origins as a form of love, not betrayal of the adoptive family. It means learning about the child's birth culture, supporting connection with biological relatives when safe, and allowing the child to explore their own spiritual or religious identity independently. Honoring spiritual ancestry acknowledges that a child's sense of belonging deepens when their full history is welcomed, not hidden. Rabia's model of devotion—which honored the sources of her own formation—becomes a practice of reverence for the child's complete genealogy.
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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