Kabir — "Grief is the ink with which joy rewrites the soul's story."
Grief is the ink with which joy rewrites the soul's story.
Grief is the ink with which joy rewrites the soul's story.
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"The beloved is hidden where you refuse to look: in yourself."
"Take a pitcher full of water and set it down in the water-now it has water inside and water outside. We mustn't give it a name, lest silly people start talking again about the body and the soul."
"Kabir stands in the market, wishing all well. Friends with none, enemies with none."
"The wise man does not distinguish between Hindu and Muslim, for he sees the same God in all."
"I sell mirrors in the city of the blind."
Indian mystic poet whose verses (preserved in the Sikh Guru Granth Sahib and the Hindu Bhakti tradition) attacked both Hindu and Islamic orthodoxy. Closely associated with Guru Nanak (founder of Sikhism, who incorporated Kabir's verses). For an intellectual contrast, see Brahmanical priesthood, the ritualistic Hindu establishment of his era — Kabir's poetry is the founding text of bhakti devotional rebellion against ritualistic Hinduism — his verses ridicule caste, ritual purity, and priestly mediation as religious theatre.
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