Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Belonging Through Storytelling Circles

The practice of gathering children to hear elder narratives that encode values, history, and identity, creating deep belonging through shared spiritual and cultural inheritance.

Rabia
Why It Matters

African communal parenting relies on storytelling as primary pedagogy—elders transmit wisdom, genealogy, and moral teaching through narrative rather than instruction. Rabia's own life was preserved through stories of her spiritual ecstasy and devotion, suggesting how narrative preserves and transmits the sacred within communities. When children sit in storytelling circles, they absorb not just information but identity, receiving their place in an unbroken chain of ancestors and future generations. These circles create belonging—the child learns 'I am from this lineage, these values, this resilience.' Rabia's emphasis on pure love translates here: elders tell stories not to control outcomes but to kindle the child's inner flame of devotion to their heritage. The circle itself—no hierarchy, all voices heard—mirrors how communal parenting distributes wisdom across generations, making each child feel genuinely known and claimed by the community.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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