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BHAKTI-SUFI CONTACT ZONE: SONGS THAT CROSSED THE LINES
The Business Guardian
|September 17, 2025
Songs of Kabir, Mirabai, Bulleh Shah turned streets into sanctuaries; vernacular publics where caste, gender, doctrine dissolve; performance keeps history alive, migrating across regions, centuries.

In medieval India, the rise of Bhakti devotion and Sufi mysticism created a dynamic cultural meeting ground - a “contact zone” where ideas from Hindu and Islamic traditions interacted.
Far from the temples of Brahmin priests and the courts of orthodox ulema, poet-saints singing in local tongues brought diverse people together. Their poems and songs, composed in the vernacular rather than Sanskrit or Arabic, reached weavers, princesses, farmers, and fakirs alike. Kabir, Mirabai, and Bulleh Shah are three luminous examples of this phenomenon. Through their verses, these figures mapped out vernacular publics cutting across caste, gender, and doctrinal lines. In their lives and poetry, we find a social his tory of communities united by spiritual seeking and social critique.
Key features of this Bhakti-Sufi contact zone included:
Use of vernacular languages: Devotional poetry was composed in local dialects rather than elite languages, making it accessible to all.
Personal experience over orthodoxy: Direct communion with the divine was valued above formal religious laws and rituals.
Social equality in spirit: Saints taught that all souls are equal before God, challenging the divisions of caste, sect, and gender.
These traits meant that the Bhakti and Sufi movements often converged in practice, creating a fluid interreligious dialogue.
KABIR: THE WEAVER'S SONGS OF UNITY
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 17, 2025-Ausgabe von The Business Guardian.
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