Localized version for English
Beni Saf is a city where Sunni Muslim identity is often the default public identity even for people who have privately stopped believing, and the gap between public compliance and private unbelief can last decades. The wider Algeria religious landscape: Sunni Muslim (~99%, Maliki) with very small Christian and Ibadi minorities; conversion away criminalized in some contexts; small but visible secularizing trend in Kabyle areas.
In a place the size of Beni Saf, the religious community is often the community. Leaving it means losing the main social infrastructure, and the rebuild usually involves finding support outside town — online groups, occasional trips to the nearest city, and the slow construction of a new social world.
Beni Saf has religious communities where the exit cost is serious. Family shunning is real and documented here. Employment and marriage can be affected. The advice to "just be honest about what you believe" assumes a safety that many people in this city do not have. The path out, for many, is incremental — building independence first, disclosure later, community afterward.
If you are in Beni Saf and you are navigating this carefully — privately deconstructed, publicly compliant, not sure who is safe to tell — Elder X understands that specific, high-stakes version of leaving. His own exit was not safe or simple. He does not push. He does not publish. He just reads and responds.
Whatever tradition you came out of, the rebuild follows a pattern. First you leave. Then you grieve. Then you figure out who you are without the container that used to hold your identity. Then — slowly, with setbacks — you build something new. Beni Saf is where that sequence is playing out for you right now. Rage 2 Rebuild exists because the rebuild is the part nobody talks about, and the part that matters most.