Practicing deep, loving attention to community members' stories and struggles as a foundational organizing practice that honors human dignity.
Rabia's mystical practice centered on witnessing—bearing loving attention to the divine, to herself, to others—translates into organizing as the practice of sacred witnessing. In community work, witnessing means listening with full presence, honoring people's narratives without rushing to frame them politically, and creating spaces where individuals feel seen and valued. This concept challenges efficiency-focused organizing that treats people as means to campaign ends. Instead, it proposes that being truly witnessed—having one's story honored, one's pain acknowledged, one's humanity affirmed—is itself transformative and mobilizing. Practically, organizing grounded in witnessing includes circle processes, oral history projects, testimony-centered campaigns, and meeting structures that prioritize relational presence over agenda completion. When community members experience genuine witnessing in organizing spaces, they develop trust and commitment that survives setbacks. The revolutionary potential emerges when people transformed by being witnessed become powerful witnesses themselves, creating exponential shifts in community consciousness and solidarity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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