Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Collective Witness and Shared Altar

Creating spaces where many can gather to mourn together, transforming tragedy into a momentary shared spiritual community.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai did not mourn alone; she sang, danced, and wept in the presence of others, creating spaces of collective devotion. Her example suggests that public mourning rituals—memorial services, social gatherings, candlelight vigils, online communities—function as contemporary altars. These spaces grant permission for grief, normalize vulnerability, and create containers where individuals feel less isolated in their sorrow. Collective witness transforms private heartbreak into communal alchemy. When thousands gather to mourn a public figure, they create a temporary sacred space bound by shared loss. This is not morbid spectacle but a human need: to be seen in grief, to know others grieve too, to participate in something larger than individual pain. Mirabai's devotional circles modeled this—spaces where spiritual truth could be spoken aloud, where tears were welcomed, where the heart's deepest concerns were honored. Modern collective mourning inherits this function, allowing us to feel less alone and more truly human.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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