Mirabai's kirtan (call-and-response chanting) as a model for structured, embodied collective grief practices that synchronize emotion and create solidarity.
Mirabai participated in and inspired kirtan—communal singing where one voice calls and many respond, creating synchronization and shared rhythm. This model translates powerfully to collective grief. Kirtan-structure offers: repetition that permits deep feeling, call-and-response that creates dialogue rather than monologue, and embodied participation that moves grief from intellectual to somatic. In contemporary context, this might mean structured grieving spaces—whether musical, poetic, or movement-based—where individuals process alongside others in organized forms. The repetition of kirtan permits feelings to move through the body; the community holds space; the call-response creates agency rather than passive consumption. Mirabai's tradition suggests that collective grief needs rhythm and structure, not to contain emotion but to permit its full expression. Kirtan models how community becomes healing vessel.
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