The principle that parenting is a communal responsibility where all adults nurture all children, grounded in Rabia's devotional love extended to the entire community.
Ubuntu—'I am because we are'—reflects how African communal parenting distributes nurturing across extended family and village networks rather than isolating it within nuclear families. Rabia al-Adawiyya's radical love, which transcended personal attachment to embrace divine connection through all beings, illuminates how African parents cultivate belonging by teaching children they are loved and accountable to many. This concept dissolves the modern boundary between 'your child' and 'our child,' creating resilience through multiple secure attachments. When a grandmother, aunt, uncle, or elder can correct, comfort, or guide any child, parenting becomes a sacred communal act of legacy-building. Rabia's pure devotion—loving without expectation of return—mirrors how African elders invest in children's futures as spiritual practice, ensuring cultural transmission and collective survival across generations.
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