Mirabai's kirtan—devotional singing in community—models how shared music dissolves individual boundaries and creates the felt experience of agape across difference.
Kirtan, the practice of call-and-response devotional singing, was Mirabai's primary vehicle for communion. She sang in temples, streets, and gatherings, and her poetry was meant to be sung aloud, inviting others into the same frequency of devotion. Kirtan is not performance but participatory ritual; the repetition of names and phrases synchronizes breath and heartbeat across the group. Neuroscience confirms what bhakti practitioners have long known: shared rhythm and vocalization create measurable attunement and dissolution of individual-group boundary. For agape across traditions, kirtan demonstrates how unconditional love is not individual sentiment but collective experience. When diverse people sing together—regardless of doctrine, background, or disagreement—something shifts. The vibration itself becomes inclusive; the music carries what words alone cannot. Mirabai's insistence on public, accessible song (not elite ritual) means kirtan is radically democratic. Any voice, any body, any degree of musical skill is welcome. This practice teaches that agape is most alive in shared expression, where individual ego is gently dissolved into something larger.
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