Applying principles of fairness and proportionality to how money is distributed and responsibilities assigned within the family.
Zera Yacob was deeply concerned with justice—not as abstract principle but as concrete practice in how people treat each other. In the household economy, this means examining whether money distribution is fair. Do children receive allowance proportional to their needs and age? Are chores assigned reasonably, or do some bear heavier burdens? Is access to money tied to gender, favoritism, or arbitrary power? By helping children notice and reason about fairness in family finances, parents teach them to recognize injustice anywhere. A child who receives less allowance than a sibling for the same work experiences injustice and learns to name it. This is not about coddling feelings but about developing the conscience that recognizes when systems are unfair. Zera Yacob believed that reason includes the capacity to see oneself in others—to recognize that if you would resent unfair treatment, others resent it too. Teaching children economic justice at home—through transparent, fair systems—prepares them to question injustice in wider economic systems and to advocate for fairness wherever they participate.
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