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Tukaram | Mirabai
Mirabai is the most famous of the women bhakta
poets of north India. Though there is some
disagreement about the precise details of her
life, it is generally agreed that she was born
in 1498, the only daughter of a Rajput chieftain
and landlord by the name of Ratan Singh, in the
neighborhood of Merta, a fortress-city, founded
by her grandfather Rao Dudaji, about 40-50 miles
north-east of Ajmer. Her mother died when
Mirabai was only four or five years old. Mirabai
is said to have been devoted to Krishna from a
very early age, and in one of her poems she
asks, "O Krishna, did You ever rightly value my
childhood love?" As her father was away much of
the time, she was then sent to be raised at her
grandfathers house. Other members of the family
were also inclined towards Vaishnava practices,
and in this environment Mirabais own religious
sentiments could grow freely. Upon the death of
her grandfather, her uncle Viram Dev took her
into his charge, and it is her uncle who
consented to have her married off to Bhoja Raj,
the heir apparent to the throne of the famous
warrior Rana Sanga of the House of Sisodiya.
There were no children from this marriage, and
in the event Mirabai took no interest in her
earthly spouse, since she believed herself to be
married to Krishna. Her husband died sometime
before her father passed away in January 1528 in
a battle with the Mughal Emperor Babur in which
her father-in-law was also seriously wounded.
The standard narrative is that at this vital
juncture Mirabai was left vulnerable to the
hostility of her conservative male relatives,
and that this hostility increased as Mirabai
became visibly detached from the affairs of the
world and her obligations to her in-laws. She
began to frequent the temple, discoursed with
the sadhus, and apparently danced before the
image: as she put it in one of her poems,
I danced before my Giridhara.
Again and again I dance
To please that discerning critic,
And put His former love to the test.
I put on the anklets
Of the love of Shyam,
And behold! My Mohan stays true.
Worldly shame and family custom
I have cast to the winds.
I do not forget the beauty of the Beloved
Even for an instant.
Mira is dyed deeply in the dye of Hari. [Alston,
p. 39]
A much younger male relative, Vikramajita, is
described as having locked her into a room, but
when that failed to bring Mirabai to her senses,
he attempted, unsuccessfully, to poison her. It
has been suggested that her relatives expected
her to commit sati, or self-immolation, after
the death of her husband; indeed, in one of her
poems Mirabai wrote, "sati na hosyan girdhar
gansyan mhara man moho ghananami", "I will not
commit sati. I will sing the songs of Girdhar
Krishna." Sometime around 1538 Mirabai arrived
in Vrindavan, where she spent most of the
remainder of her life before moving, shortly
before her death, to Dwarka. One of the most
famous anecdotes from her life, quite likely
apocryphal, relates a meeting she had in
Vrindavan with Jiva Goswami, a renowned
Vaishnava of the Chaitanya school. Jiva Goswami
at first refused to meet with her since she was
a woman, whereupon Mirabai is said to have
retorted: "I used to think that the Lord Krishna
was the only man in Vrindavan and that all the
rest of the inhabitants were gopis. Now Ive
discovered that theres someone else here
besides Lord Krishna who thinks of himself as a
man." Different traditions relate that Mirabai
met Chaitanya, Tulsidas, Akbar, and Tansen, but
none of these have ever been authenticated, and
there is an inconsistency in the chronology,
since Mirabai lived several decades before Akbar.
Mirabai most likely passed away in 1546, but
here too the evidence is very scanty.
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