Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Witnessing as Collective Devotion

Mirabai's public devotion created community; collective grief similarly becomes sacred practice when we witness each other's mourning and honor the shared loss together.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's devotional practice was not private—she danced, sang, and testified publicly, and others gathered to witness and join her. In our fragmented world, collective grief often lacks this witnessing dimension; we mourn online, alone with screens, rarely truly seeing each other's faces. Yet witnessing is devotional act. When we gather—physically or consciously—to acknowledge shared loss, to speak the name of the departed, to articulate why they mattered, we practice a form of contemporary witnessing. This is not maudlin sentimentality but fierce love expressed collectively. Gathering to witness grief for a public figure transforms it from private sadness into communal meaning-making. We testify to each other: this person existed, mattered, changed us. This witnessing honors both the individual lost and the larger human capacity to be moved, altered, and connected through loss.

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