The bhakti tradition of critical devotion (nindya bhakti), which grieves while also questioning and protesting, offering a model for grief that does not accept tragedy passively.
Mirabai's devotion was not passive surrender; it was fierce questioning, protest, and demand directed at the divine. Nindya bhakti allows the griever to love and critique simultaneously. When we mourn public figures or tragedies, we need not choose between honoring them and asking hard questions. A murdered activist deserves grief AND investigation of systemic injustice. A preventable disaster deserves mourning AND accountability. This is nindya bhakti: the examined heart that refuses false comfort. In collective settings, this becomes powerful: candlelight vigils that transition into protest marches, eulogies that name systemic failures, grief rituals that catalyze political action. Mirabai's poetry often held the divine accountable—'Where are you when I need you?'—while maintaining devotion. Collective grief rooted in nindya bhakti becomes a force for justice rather than a moment of catharsis that leaves oppressive structures intact. It honors the dead most fully by refusing to let their deaths become abstractions or spectacles divorced from material change.
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