Treating the teaching of younger generations not as optional service but as a spiritual obligation binding elders to future flourishing.
Rabia spent her life transmitting not just doctrines but a lived practice of love—showing disciples how to embody devotion. African traditions recognized wisdom transmission as sacred duty: griots maintained histories, elders taught young people initiation knowledge, healers trained apprentices. This wasn't career path but vocation. When we treat wisdom transmission as obligation rather than gift or burden, it shifts how elders and youth relate. Elders understand their knowledge as held in trust for the community's future; youth understand they receive a sacred inheritance requiring care and respect. Rabia's model suggests this transmission happens through presence, example, and patient response to genuine seeking—not lecture or force. Intergenerational responsibility activates when elders commit to this duty despite fatigue, age, or feeling unheard. Modern contexts need formalized structures: mentoring programs, apprenticeships, storytelling circles, and spaces where elder knowledge is explicitly valued and protected. This prevents the brain drain where cultural knowledge dies with elders, and it honors the sacred function of passing life wisdom forward.
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.