Understanding collective grief as a way of honoring spiritual lineage and recommitting to values embodied by those we've lost.
Mirabai belonged to the bhakti lineage, drawing strength from centuries of devotional practitioners. When she mourned her beloved, she mourned within a tradition that sanctified her grief and gave it meaning. Similarly, collective mourning can be understood as participating in lineage—honoring not only the specific person lost but the values, struggles, and wisdom they carried forward. When we mourn a justice worker, we honor the lineage of liberation struggle. When we mourn an artist, we claim lineage in creativity and resistance. This framework transforms grief into spiritual inheritance. Mourning becomes an act of recommitment: we inherit what the deceased fought for and carried, and through grief-work, we claim responsibility for continuing that lineage. Collective rituals that acknowledge this—naming ancestors, studying the departed's work, continuing their unfinished projects—ground communities in historical continuity. Rather than viewing loss as endpoint, this approach sees it as transition, where the deceased's influence becomes distributed throughout the community, asking us all to become carriers of their legacy.
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