Chandidas and the Language of Forbidden Love: When Human Longing Meets Divine Grace In fourteenth-century Bengal, in the quiet village of Nanur in present-day Birbhum district, lived a temple priest named Chandidas. He served the goddess Bashuli, a form of Durga, with devotion and learning. Yet within his devout heart burned another kind of devotion — one that society deemed impure and unacceptable. He had fallen deeply in love with Ramini, a washerwoman, a woman of a lower caste. By every social convention of medieval India, this love was not merely improper; it was a transgression. The caste hierarchy that governed village life drew invisible but iron walls between human beings, and Chandidas and Ramini found themselves on opposite sides of one such wall. Their love could not be spoken aloud. It could not be celebrated. It could only be felt — silently, painfully, and with the quiet desperation of those who know their longing will never find social sanction. Solace in Song: Turni...