Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Kirtan as Collective Witnessing

Using communal chanting and call-response (kirtan) to transform isolated grief into shared witness, creating ritual containers for public mourning.

Mira
Why It Matters

Kirtan—devotional call-and-response singing—was Mirabai's primary practice, dissolving ego-boundaries through collective voice. Applied to public mourning, kirtan creates ritual containers that prevent grief from becoming isolated despair or performative spectacle. Shared witnessing through chant, song, or spoken word rituals legitimizes collective emotion while channeling it toward remembrance and meaning-making. When tragedies strike, communities naturally gather to speak names, share stories, sing together—these are modern kirtans. The practice's power lies in synchronization: individual sorrow becomes part of larger rhythmic flow, held by community voice. This prevents the exhaustion of solitary grief while avoiding the dissociation of spectator culture. Kirtan transforms passive mourning into active participation, where each voice matters, each person's sorrow receives acknowledgment, and collective witness becomes sacred act rather than social media performance.

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