Periagoge
Concept
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Kirtana: Singing What Must Not Be Forgotten

The bhakti practice of chanting and song as a form of cultural preservation and grieving; applied to documenting and celebrating what civilization risks losing.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's kirtana—devotional songs—were acts of preservation and witness. She sang what others would not acknowledge, made visible what was hidden. In contemporary context, kirtana becomes a practice of deliberate documentation and celebration of what civilization risks losing: ecosystems, languages, ways of knowing, stories, skills. This is not nostalgic or escapist. Rather, it is a disciplined practice of witnessing and naming what deserves to endure. Communities around the world practice kirtana through oral history projects, seed libraries, traditional craft preservation, and artistic expression. These acts are simultaneously grief work (acknowledging loss) and creative resistance (ensuring knowledge survives). Mirabai's tradition teaches that song transforms suffering into meaning. When we sing what is dying, we refuse its erasure; we create containers for future generations to understand what was valued, how people lived, what was possible.

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