Love as the act of witnessing shared grief, where devotion becomes a container for communal mourning and transforms loss into connection.
Mirabai's bhakti tradition teaches that love (prema) is not private sentiment but a force that binds hearts across time and circumstance. In collective grief, prema becomes the capacity to witness tragedy not as isolated observers but as interconnected mourners. When we grieve public figures or shared tragedies, we participate in a larger devotional act—acknowledging the humanity in loss and refusing to let suffering be invisible or unmourned. This framework invites us to see collective grief not as weakness but as spiritual practice: the examined heart that opens to others' pain. Mirabai's songs, often written in mourning for Krishna, model how personal devotion can speak to universal longing and loss. In our context, this means grieving together becomes a form of love-witness, where each person's tears honor the dignity of the lost and strengthen communal bonds through shared vulnerability.
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