Tawbah, spiritual return or repentance, is fundamentally about homecoming—the courage to turn toward community again after harm, separation, or alienation.
Tawbah, often translated as repentance, more deeply means a turning toward home—a return to wholeness and right relationship. In Rabia al-Adawiyya's understanding, tawbah is not punishment-based guilt but loving return to alignment with truth and community. Every rupture in belonging—whether from our own harm, others' harm, or simple drift—creates exile. Tawbah is the courageous act of turning back, of seeking reunion with those we've wronged or from whom we've withdrawn. Rabia taught that this return itself is sacred, worthy of celebration rather than shame. In community, tawbah practices enable healing: the willingness to acknowledge how we've hurt others, to change our behavior, and to rebuild trust. This isn't about self-flagellation but about genuine transformation that restores the fabric of belonging. Communities that normalize tawbah—where people can return from alienation or harm with authentic apology and changed action—experience deeper bonds. Homecoming joy emerges when we know we can always turn back toward those we love.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.