A practice of public utterance and witness through music, poetry, and voice: making visible and audible what civilization prefers to leave unnamed.
Kirtana—ecstatic chanting or singing—was Mirabai's primary practice. She sang in public, defying norms, making her devotion and pain audible and collective. Kirtana as anticipatory grief practice means finding voice (literal or metaphorical) to name and testify to what is being lost: through poetry, song, conversation, ritual, or art. This is not complaint but testimony—bearing witness publicly rather than suffering privately. Kirtana breaks the silence that protects systems from scrutiny. When we kirtana our grief for vanishing species, languages, lifeways, we make collective what might otherwise remain isolated despair. Mirabai's kirtana scandalized her society; our kirtana of civilizational grief may scandalize comfort and complacency. It is an act of love made audible, a refusal to let loss be erased or privatized.
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