Transforming collective grief into spiritual service by meeting suffering with compassionate action rather than passive lamentation.
Seva (service) is fundamental to bhakti practice. Dukha seva—service through or in response to suffering—is the practice of channeling grief into meaningful action. Mirabai's devotion was never confined to private rapture; her songs spoke to the marginalized and oppressed of her time. When we grieve collectively, dukha seva asks: How does this loss call us to serve? Collective mourning of a tragedy can catalyze community aid, systemic reform, or renewed commitment to justice. Rather than grief becoming stagnant sentimentality, dukha seva sanctifies it as fuel for compassionate action. The examined heart recognizes that honoring the dead means tending to the living. This framework transforms public mourning from passive memorial into active care—creating scholarships in victims' names, advocating for change, supporting survivors. Dukha seva reintegrates grief into the fabric of communal life, ensuring that sorrow becomes generative rather than isolating.
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