Understanding mourning communities as spiritual congregations bound together through shared ritual, attention, and love for the deceased.
Mirabai's bhakti tradition emphasizes sangha—spiritual community—as essential to devotion. Her poetry circulated through communities of devotees who sang together, creating collective containers for love and longing. When tragedies occur, grief communities spontaneously form: vigils, memorials, online gatherings where strangers become a temporary sangha united by shared loss. This concept frames these grief communities as sacred bodies with spiritual function. The gathering itself becomes devotional practice. Collective presence, shared tears, unified songs or silences—these create a field of attention that honors the dead and heals the living. Mirabai understood that individual devotion gains power through community witness and participation. Applied to public mourning, this means actively creating and honoring the spaces where communities gather—whether formal memorials or spontaneous vigils. These are not distractions from personal grief but sacred gatherings where collective devotion becomes a form of love and spiritual service to the deceased.
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