Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Kirtan: Collective Witnessing of Grief

The practice of group singing and chanting that transforms private grief into communal expression, creating solidarity and shared meaning through creative practice.

Mira
Why It Matters

Kirtan—call-and-response singing of devotional songs—was Mirabai's primary practice and legacy. It's not solitary but collective; it creates community around shared emotion and meaning. For contemporary creators, kirtan offers an alternative to the myth of the isolated suffering artist: grief can be shared, witnessed, and held by community. When individuals share creative work born from loss in group contexts—whether through music, storytelling, performance, or ritual—something shifts: the isolation dissolves, and meaning multiplies. Kirtan suggests that the most profound creative work isn't meant to remain in private journals but to be offered, shared, and sung together. Mirabai's bhajans endured because they were sung; they became part of collective spiritual practice. This concept invites makers to ask: How might my work serve others who grieve? What happens when I offer my grief-work not as isolated confession but as an invitation to others to recognize themselves? Kirtan teaches that creative expression born from loss gains its full power only when it becomes part of the shared human song.

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