Rabia's mentorship legacy demonstrates how intentional communities can cultivate love, wisdom, and belonging that flows from elder to younger members across time.
Rabia shaped her students and community through direct transmission of lived wisdom, not abstract teaching. Her presence and example were the curriculum. In cohousing design, this concept invites intentional intergenerational structure: elders becoming knowledge-keepers and guides, younger members as apprentices not just to skills but to ways of being. Rather than age segregation, communities inspired by Rabia's legacy create mentoring relationships, ritual roles, and storytelling practices that ensure belonging and wisdom flow downward. This might include elder councils with real decision-making power, apprenticeship in community crafts or care practices, or formalized storytelling traditions. The practice recognizes that legacy is not about property or inheritance but about transmitting the felt experience of what it means to love, belong, and contribute. When younger residents grow up in such containers, they internalize values and practices that become their own inheritance to pass forward.
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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