In African communal mourning, singing becomes a sacred practice that transforms private sorrow into collective spiritual experience, mirroring Mirabai's devotional poetry.
Mirabai's bhakti poetry was inseparable from song and performance—her verses were meant to be sung, to move the body and soul together. In African grief traditions, the funeral song, dirge, and call-and-response serve identical functions: they externalize internal pain and make it communal property. The griever who sings is not simply expressing emotion; they are performing a sacred act that honors the dead and binds the living. This concept explores how vocal devotion—whether to Krishna or to the ancestors—sanctifies grief, transforms it from isolating anguish into shared spiritual work. When a community sings together over the dead, they are, like Mirabai, dissolving the boundary between personal longing and divine encounter. The examined heart, in this frame, becomes a singing heart.
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