Transforming community members' experiences of hardship and injustice into sources of insight and collective power.
Rabia lived in poverty and hardship yet spoke of these experiences as intimacy with the Divine, sources of depth and wisdom. In community organizing, this concept invites organizers to work with—not around—people's experiences of suffering and injustice. Rather than treating pain as something to move past quickly, organizers help community members extract wisdom from their struggles: understanding systemic patterns, recognizing their own resilience, and discovering what they value most. Listening deeply to people's suffering stories builds empathy across the group, reveals shared patterns of injustice, and helps people name their power. This doesn't romanticize suffering but recognizes that people who have survived difficulty often possess clarity about what matters and willingness to risk for change. By treating community members as wisdom-keepers of their own experience, organizers honor their dignity and access the insight required for effective strategic thinking and moral courage.
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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