All Thinkers

Mirabai

Mirabai was a sixteenth-century Indian poet and saint. She is one of the most loved figures in the bhakti movement, a Hindu devotional tradition that swept across India for many centuries. She was born around 1498 in Kudki, a village in present-day Rajasthan in north-west India. Her family, the Rathore Rajputs, were a royal warrior clan. Her mother died when she was young. According to tradition, Mirabai was given a small image of the god Krishna by a holy man during her childhood. She held on to it, and her devotion to Krishna grew. She came to see him as her divine husband. In 1516, when she was about 18, she was married to Bhoj Raj, the crown prince of the neighbouring Mewar kingdom. He was wounded in battle and died in 1521. Mirabai refused to commit sati, the practice of a widow burning herself on her husband's funeral pyre, which was expected of Rajput princesses. This refusal began a long conflict with her in-laws. Legends say her in-laws made several attempts to kill her: poison disguised as nectar, a snake in a basket of flowers, a bed of nails. Each time, she survived. Whether these stories are literal history or symbols of her spiritual protection, they show that she lived under real threat. She eventually left palace life. She wandered to Vrindavan, Krishna's mythical home, and to Dwarka in Gujarat. She sang her songs in temples and public places. She is believed to have died around 1547. Hundreds of devotional songs are attributed to her, though most were probably composed later in her tradition.

Origin
India (Rajasthan)
Lifespan
c. 1498-c. 1547
Era
Early Modern
Subjects
Bhakti Movement Indian Poetry Krishna Devotion Women's Spirituality Hinduism
Why They Matter

Mirabai matters for three reasons. First, she is one of the most powerful voices of the bhakti movement, which transformed Hindu religious life across India.

Bhakti means devotion

Bhakti poets argued that anyone, of any caste or gender, could reach God through love alone. Priests, rituals, and Sanskrit knowledge were not required. Mirabai's songs to Krishna are still sung in homes, temples, and films across India today.

Second, she defied gender and caste rules of her society. Rajput princesses were expected to obey their fathers, then their husbands, then their sons. Widows were expected to commit sati or live in strict seclusion. Mirabai refused all of this. She danced and sang in public, met with holy men of all backgrounds, and travelled freely. She accepted a low-caste Dalit teacher, Ravidas, as her guru, ignoring the rules that should have separated them. Her example has inspired Indian feminists and reformers ever since.

Third, her poetry shows that religious devotion can be a form of personal freedom. Mirabai sang of Krishna as her lover and her own. By making this divine love the centre of her life, she set herself free from many human masters.

Husbands, kings, fathers, in-laws, priests

None could really control her, because her loyalty was elsewhere. This is a paradox that runs through bhakti tradition. Total surrender to God can be the foundation of independence from everyone else. Her life is a powerful example of how spiritual commitment and social rebellion can be the same act.

Key Ideas
1
Bhakti: Devotion as the Path
2
Refusing Sati
3
Krishna as Beloved
Key Quotations
"Mira's lord is the clever Mountain Lifter; she is his slave forever, at the dust of his lotus feet."
— Common closing signature line in poems attributed to Mirabai
Many poems attributed to Mirabai end with a line like this one. 'Mountain Lifter' (Giridhar) refers to a story in which the young Krishna lifted a mountain to shelter villagers from a storm. The 'lotus feet' is a respectful way to refer to the feet of a god. Mira signs her own name and declares her lifelong devotion. The signature line is a common feature of bhakti poetry. It tells the listener whose poem this is and what stance the poet takes. For students, the line shows the warmth and fierceness of Mirabai's devotion in a single sentence. It also shows the tension feminists have noted: she calls herself a slave. Both the freedom and the surrender are real.
"I have given up everything: my name, my family, and my home."
— Paraphrased from poems attributed to Mirabai about leaving palace life
Many of Mirabai's songs describe what she gave up to follow Krishna. Her royal name. Her connection to her family. The palace and its wealth. These were huge things to lose in her society. A Rajput princess who left her in-laws' household had no real place to go. By giving them up, she became a wandering singer. For students, the quote opens a discussion about cost. Real commitment usually requires letting go of things that other people value highly. Mirabai did not say it was easy. She said she had done it. Her honesty about loss is part of what makes her songs ring true.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When introducing Indian religious traditions
How to introduce
Many students have heard of yoga, but few know about bhakti. Tell them about the bhakti movement: a centuries-long Indian tradition that put love and song at the heart of religious life, available to people of any caste or gender. Mirabai was one of its most loved voices. Play a recording of one of her bhajans (devotional songs); many are easy to find online. Even without translating the words, students can hear the longing and warmth. This is a respectful introduction to a major Indian tradition.
Creative Expression When teaching students about poetry of devotion or longing
How to introduce
Read aloud a translated Mirabai poem. Many of her poems describe missing someone, longing for someone, or being totally devoted to someone. These feelings are familiar to students even if Krishna is not. Ask: what poems, songs, or films express similar feelings today? Mirabai's poems show that human beings have written about deep love and longing across many cultures and centuries. Her form was sung devotional poetry; ours might be pop song. The feeling can travel.
Ethical Thinking When discussing courage and refusing harmful traditions
How to introduce
Tell students about Mirabai's refusal of sati. The tradition expected her to burn alive when her husband died. She said no. Ask students: when have they seen someone refuse to follow a tradition that was harmful? What did it cost? What did it open? Mirabai's example is dramatic. It also connects to many smaller refusals: refusing to bully, refusing to laugh at a joke that hurts someone, refusing to participate in cruelty. The principle is the same.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, Robert Bly and Jane Hirshfield's Mirabai: Ecstatic Poems (Beacon Press, 2004) is a beautiful selection in English translation. Andrew Schelling's For Love of the Dark One: Songs of Mirabai (Hohm Press, 1998) is also accessible and powerful. The 1947 Hindi film Meera, with songs by M. S. Subbulakshmi, is available online and gives a strong cultural sense of how Mirabai is loved in India. The Poetry Foundation website has a clear short biography with translated poems.

Key Ideas
1
The Dalit Guru: Ravidas
2
What She Wrote and What Was Written Later
3
The Bhakti Movement and Its Wider Reach
Key Quotations
"I am not a slave to anyone, except to the Mountain Lifter."
— Paraphrased from poems attributed to Mirabai
This shows the paradox at the heart of Mirabai's life. She calls herself Krishna's slave. But she calls herself no one else's slave. By total surrender to God, she frees herself from every human authority. Her father-in-law cannot command her. The king cannot. Society cannot. She belongs to a higher loyalty, and so all lower ones lose their grip. This is a striking move. It is also a move many religious women have made across many traditions. Christian nuns, Buddhist nuns, Muslim Sufi women, and others have all used devotion to find space outside ordinary social control. For intermediate students, this quote opens a serious idea: spiritual surrender can be a strategy for human freedom.
"Why should I be afraid? My true husband is the lord of life."
— Paraphrased from poems attributed to Mirabai
Mirabai's in-laws were powerful. They could have her killed. But the songs attributed to her show no fear. Her real husband, she insists, is Krishna, who controls life and death. Earthly powers cannot really threaten someone whose loyalty is elsewhere. Whether or not the historical Mirabai was always this calm, the tradition celebrates her fearlessness. For students, the quote raises a useful question. Where does courage come from? For Mirabai, it came from a deep belief that her real life was somewhere else. Other forms of courage have other sources, but the question is the same. People who can stand up to power usually have something they value more than safety.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When teaching students how to handle figures whose history is partially legend
How to introduce
Tell students that we know Mirabai existed. We do not know exactly which poems she wrote. We do not know if all the famous miracle stories actually happened. Ask students: how should we approach a figure like this? Is she 'real'? Is she 'fictional'? The answer is somewhere in between. She is part historical, part legendary, part centuries of community memory. Many religious founders, classical poets, and ancient kings come down to us in the same way. Working honestly with mixed evidence is a key research skill.
Cultural Heritage and Identity When discussing how religion can break social hierarchies
How to introduce
Mirabai accepted the Dalit poet Ravidas as her spiritual teacher. A Rajput princess and a man from the lowest caste sat together as guru and student. This was a major break with caste rules. Ask students: have you seen religious settings where social hierarchies fall away, even briefly? Some students will think of mosques, churches, festivals, or pilgrimages where people of very different backgrounds stood as equals. Mirabai's example connects to this broader pattern.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, A. J. Alston's The Devotional Poems of Mirabai (Motilal Banarsidass, 1980) is the most comprehensive English collection with scholarly notes.

John Stratton Hawley's Three Bhakti Voices

Mirabai, Surdas, and Kabir in Their Time and Ours (Oxford, 2005) is the leading academic study and is honest about what we can and cannot know. Madhu Kishwar and Ruth Vanita's classic essay 'Poison to Nectar: The Life and Work of Mirabai' (Manushi, 1989) gives an Indian feminist reading.

Parita Mukta's Upholding the Common Life

The Community of Mirabai (Oxford, 1994) studies how rural Indian communities still use her songs.

Key Ideas
1
Feminist Readings and Their Limits
2
What Counts as History?
3
Mirabai in Modern India
Key Quotations
"I have danced before all the people. I have nothing to hide."
— Paraphrased from poems attributed to Mirabai
Public dancing by a royal woman was scandalous in Mirabai's society. Rajput princesses lived behind walls and veils. They did not appear before strangers. Mirabai broke this rule. She danced and sang in public, in temples, in front of crowds. She knew her in-laws considered this disgraceful. She did it anyway. The line declares she has 'nothing to hide'. The hidden inner life of the elite woman becomes a public testimony. For advanced students, the quote is a window onto a long tradition of women using religion to step into public space. Many women across many cultures have used spiritual roles to do things that would have been forbidden in ordinary social positions. Mirabai's dancing is one example of this wider pattern.
"There is always an element of enigma. There must always remain a question about whether there is any real relation between the poems we cite and a historical Mira."
— John Stratton Hawley, Three Bhakti Voices: Mirabai, Surdas, and Kabir in Their Time and Ours, 2005
This is not Mirabai herself. It is a leading modern scholar reflecting honestly on the limits of what we can know about her. Most of the poems we now sing as 'Mirabai' may have been composed by later devotees. We cannot be sure. The historical Mirabai is partially hidden behind centuries of devotion. Hawley's honesty is useful. He does not say Mirabai is fake. He says we have to be careful about what we claim. For advanced students, the quote is a model of mature scholarship. Loving a tradition does not require pretending we know more than we do. The Mirabai who matters now is partly a real woman, partly a long song that her people have kept singing in her name.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When discussing how resistance is rarely pure
How to introduce
Mirabai refused human masters but called herself the slave of a divine one. She rebelled against the rules of being a wife but accepted the role of devotional bride to a god. Ask students: is this resistance, conformity, or both? This is a mature discussion. Real resistance to power rarely looks pure. People often break some chains while still wearing others. Mirabai's case is a useful example for thinking about all kinds of resistance: feminist, anti-colonial, civil rights. The mix of breaking and accepting is part of how change actually happens.
Cultural Heritage and Identity When studying how figures are claimed by different groups
How to introduce
In modern India, Mirabai is claimed by very different communities. Hindu nationalists invoke her as proof of Hindu spiritual greatness. Indian feminists invoke her as an early woman rebel. Bhakti scholars treat her as one voice in a wider movement. Secular readers sometimes find her ecstatic devotion uncomfortable. Ask students: why do different groups claim the same historical figure? What does each group emphasise and what does each group avoid? This is a rich discussion that applies to many figures: Joan of Arc in France, Lincoln in America, Gandhi in India. The past is always being claimed by the present.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Mirabai wrote all the songs attributed to her.

What to teach instead

She probably did not. Hundreds of songs are attributed to her, but most modern scholars agree that many were composed by later devotees in her name. The bhakti tradition kept her voice alive by adding to it. We cannot easily separate the historical Mirabai's poems from those of later poets singing in her tradition. This is honest history, not a denial of her importance. The 'Mirabai' we have is the real woman plus the centuries of devotion that grew around her.

Common misconception

Mirabai was a feminist in the modern sense.

What to teach instead

She broke many gender rules of her society, but her own framework was religious, not feminist. She did not argue for women's rights as a category. She argued for total devotion to Krishna. The freedom that resulted was a side effect of her spiritual loyalty, not a stated political goal. Modern feminists have rightly drawn on her example, but reading her as if she shared modern feminist categories misses what was actually distinctive about her. Her bhakti was the foundation of her independence, not modern political theory.

Common misconception

The miracle stories about Mirabai are simply true.

What to teach instead

Most modern scholars treat the famous miracle stories (poison turning into nectar, snake becoming Krishna, body floating instead of drowning) as devotional traditions that grew after her death. They are meant to teach truths about faith, not to record historical events. This does not mean the stories are worthless. They tell us how Mirabai was remembered and what her communities valued in her. But treating them as literal history confuses two different kinds of truth: factual and spiritual.

Common misconception

Mirabai represents a uniquely Indian phenomenon.

What to teach instead

Her pattern is found across many religious traditions. Christian women mystics like Teresa of Ávila used the language of romantic love for their relationship with Christ. Sufi women like Rabia of Basra used love-language for their relationship with God. Bhakti traditions in India produced Mirabai but also Akka Mahadevi, Lal Ded, and many others. The pattern of the woman who finds freedom through total devotion to a divine beloved is a wide human phenomenon. Mirabai is a great Indian example, but she should not be cut off from the global tradition she belongs to.

Intellectual Connections
Complements
Teresa of Ávila
Teresa of Ávila in sixteenth-century Spain and Mirabai in sixteenth-century India never met and never knew of each other. Yet their lives have striking parallels. Both were women of high social status who used religious devotion as a path to a kind of freedom. Both used the language of romantic love for the divine. Both were viewed with suspicion by religious authorities of their time. Reading them together shows that women in very different cultures arrived at similar spiritual strategies through their own paths.
Complements
Julian of Norwich
Julian of Norwich, the medieval English mystic, predates Mirabai by about 150 years. Both women wrote in their own vernacular languages (English for Julian, Rajasthani and other regional languages for Mirabai) instead of the prestige languages of their religious traditions (Latin and Sanskrit). Both created intimate, accessible devotional language that ordinary people could enter. Both insisted on a personal relationship with the divine that did not require priestly mediation. Reading them together shows how women across very different cultures reshaped religious language for direct human use.
In Dialogue With
Rumi
Rumi, the thirteenth-century Persian Sufi poet, is one of the closest parallels to Mirabai in another religious tradition. Both used the language of human love and longing to describe the relationship between the soul and God. Both produced poetry that has remained beloved across centuries. Their cultures were very different (Persian Sufi Islam and Indian Krishna bhakti), but their poetic strategies have remarkable echoes. Reading them together gives students a feel for how the love-mysticism tradition works across major world religions.
Develops
Adi Shankara
Shankara, the eighth-century Indian philosopher, defended a path to God through philosophical knowledge (jnana). Mirabai, several centuries later, embodied the alternative path of devotion (bhakti). The two paths existed alongside each other in Hindu tradition. Bhakti often appealed to people whom philosophical schooling excluded: women, lower castes, the unlearned. Shankara and Mirabai together represent two of the great traditions of Indian religious thought. Neither cancels the other. The relationship between them is one of the great themes of Indian philosophy.
Anticipates
Savitribai Phule
Phule, the nineteenth-century Indian social reformer and educator, fought for women's rights, the rights of Dalits, and the abolition of practices like child marriage and the harsh treatment of widows. Mirabai's earlier example, refusing sati and accepting a Dalit guru, anticipates Phule's later structured campaigns. They lived three centuries apart and worked in very different ways. But both broke the rules of caste and gender. Reading them together gives students a long view of Indian women's resistance to oppressive traditions.
Complements
Audre Lorde
Lorde, the twentieth-century African American Black lesbian poet, wrote about love, longing, and refusal in different terms but with related power. Both Lorde and Mirabai wrote from positions society did not expect to hear. Both used poetry to claim ground their cultures had not given them. Both treated love as serious, even revolutionary. Reading them together opens a global conversation about women using poetry to step into public voice. The historical and cultural contexts are very different. The function of the poetry is recognisably similar.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, Nancy M. Martin's writings on Mirabai's afterlife in Indian and Western contexts are excellent. John Stratton Hawley's wider work on bhakti, including A Storm of Songs (2015), places her in the broader bhakti movement. For Sanskrit and Indian-language scholarship, S. M. Pandey and Norman Zide's 1965 article in History of Religions remains a starting point. The Critical Encyclopedia of Hinduism and the Encyclopedia of Religion have substantive entries. For comparison with other women mystics, the wider field of comparative mysticism studies offers useful context.