Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Visible and Invisible Community

Rabia belonged simultaneously to a visible community of seekers and an invisible community of saints across time and tradition; this dual citizenship loosens pressure to fit into any single group.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia lived in Baghdad's spiritual community but also participated in what Islamic tradition calls the "community of saints" (ummat al-awliya)—a invisible fellowship spanning centuries and traditions, including Christian and Jewish mystics. This dual citizenship creates remarkable freedom. When your belonging is distributed across visible and invisible communities, you're less vulnerable to any single group's demand for conformity. You can honor your local community's values while maintaining deeper allegiance to a broader spiritual lineage. This framework addresses a modern belonging crisis: many people feel pressure to choose between their "real" community (local, present, visible) and their "true" community (dispersed, online, temporal). Rabia's model integrates both. You can belong fully to your immediate circle while knowing yourself part of something larger and timeless. This doesn't mean detachment; rather, it provides psychological spaciousness. Your worth isn't dependent on any single community's approval because you simultaneously hold multiple belonging memberships, some visible and some invisible.

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Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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