A role and practice of naming the systems of favoritism embedded in organizations, drawing on Rabia's unflinching honesty about power and preference.
Rabia lived in a hierarchical society and never pretended otherwise. She spoke directly to rulers and scholars, naming their contradictions without flattery. Her tradition offers a model for the institutional witness: someone who sees and articulates how favoritism operates within systems. This witness observes: Which groups receive resources disproportionately? Whose children are recruited into leadership? Whose perspectives are sought in decisions? Where do informal networks exclude? Who is trusted by default and who must prove trustworthiness? The witness function is not comfortable; it requires standing outside the benefits system to see it clearly. Many who benefit from institutional favoritism don't see it—they experience preference as meritocracy. Rabia's unflinching gaze suggests that witnessing favoritism requires both courage and compassion: courage to speak what's visible, compassion for those whose identity is bound up with the unjust system. This practice doesn't guarantee change, but it makes change possible by introducing visibility where favoritism thrives in shadow.
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.