The devotional singing practice of kirtan applied to collective mourning, using voice and repetition to sustain shared memory and honor the dead.
Kirtan—call-and-response devotional singing—was central to Mirabai's practice. The repetition, the gathering, the voice becoming part of something larger than oneself: these elements sustained her through loss. In collective grief, we can adapt this practice through memorial gatherings, shared rituals, and the speaking or singing of names. The act of giving voice together to our mourning prevents it from remaining isolated and private. When communities sing, speak, or repeatedly invoke the memory of someone lost, we collectively affirm their continued presence in our hearts and culture. This is why memorial services, vigils, and commemorative gatherings feel essential during public grief. The kirtan principle teaches that repetition and collective voice transform individual sorrow into collective devotion. We sustain memory not through forgetting, but through sustained, embodied attention and speaking.
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