Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Kirtana as Collective Resilience Practice

The practice of group singing and chanting as a means of building collective emotional resilience, shared meaning, and non-verbal communion.

Mira
Why It Matters

Kirtana—congregational chanting and singing—was Mirabai's primary practice. She sang in public, with ordinary people, often shocking society with her lack of shame or hierarchy. Kirtana creates resonance: individual voices joining in repeated phrases, creating a field of coherence. For communities facing anticipatory grief, kirtana offers a somatic, non-intellectual practice. Grief shared in rhythm, voice, and presence becomes bearable and even transformative. Kirtana does not require belief in particular outcomes; it requires only presence and voice. In contexts of climate anxiety, social fragmentation, or civilizational uncertainty, kirtana practices—singing, chanting, rhythmic prayer—rebuild nervous system regulation and community bonds. Mirabai's kirtana was radical because it crossed caste and class; it created momentary equality. Modern kirtana and similar practices (group singing, drum circles, call-and-response) offer pathways for communities to metabolize grief collectively, building resilience not through denial but through embodied togetherness.

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