Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Witness to Witness: Breaking Silence Across Generations

A practice of bearing truthful testimony to ancestral experiences, replacing enforced silence with conscious, compassionate acknowledgment.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Intergenerational trauma often survives through silence—family members knowing something is wrong but unable to name it. This enforced unknowing becomes a kind of loyalty, a conspiracy of quiet that perpetuates harm by denying it. Rabia's spiritual practice required radical honesty, expressed in poetry that named longing, struggle, and direct encounter with the divine. This concept applies that witness practice to family trauma: becoming someone who can say aloud what happened. This is not judgment or blame but truthful testimony. You name that your parent was depressed, even if they never could. You acknowledge that your family normalized emotional neglect. You speak that your grandmother's silence about abuse created space for its continuation. This witnessing is an act of love when done with compassion for those who could not speak. You become the generation that breaks the silence pact, modeling that truth and belonging are not mutually exclusive. When you witness clearly, your children inherit a different legacy: the knowledge that what is real can be named, that pain acknowledged is pain beginning to heal, that speaking truth is an act of fierce care.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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