The practice of deep, mentoring relationships within community (ikhtilat) that honor both intimacy and spiritual growth, exemplified by Rabia's relationships.
Rabia maintained profound friendships with other seekers and mystics—relationships that were spiritually generative and mutually transformative. The Arabic concept of ikhtilat refers to the mingling or mixing that occurs in authentic spiritual friendship. This goes beyond casual association: it's the intentional intertwining of lives in service of deeper understanding and growth. In modern community, spiritual friendship is a corrective to both isolation and superficial connection. These are relationships where people discuss their deepest questions, witness each other's struggles, hold accountability with love, and celebrate breakthroughs. Unlike therapy or mentorship, spiritual friendship is reciprocal and mutual. Rabia's model shows that such friendships don't compete with broader community—they strengthen it by modeling what genuine connection looks like. When community members cultivate several spiritual friendships within the larger group, the entire container becomes more authentic. People bring the vulnerability and honesty from these deep pairs into the collective, raising the water line of intimacy everywhere. This creates belonging that feels both deeply personal and collectively held.
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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