Bringing contemplative awareness and sacred intention to organizing work, honoring the spiritual dimensions of collective action.
Rabia's life exemplified how spiritual devotion could coexist with radical presence in the world. For community organizers, this concept challenges the secular-only approach that dominates modern activism. Spiritual presence means gathering with intention, creating space for prayer, meditation, or reflection within organizing spaces. It means recognizing that people organize not only for material gains but for meaning-making and spiritual wholeness. This practice honors diverse religious traditions while acknowledging that transformative work requires tending to the soul alongside strategy. When organizers cultivate spiritual presence, they help members access deeper reservoirs of resilience and hope. They create ceremonies around victories and losses, grounding political work in the sacred dimensions of human struggle. This integration prevents burnout by connecting daily tasks to transcendent purpose, as Rabia's devotion sustained her through poverty and hardship.
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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