TLDR: Valarie Kaur and Sonny Singh are hosting the first Sage Warrior Retreat (April 17–19, 2025 at Kripalu Center in Western Massachusetts), a program rooted in the Sikh concept of Sant Sipahi—the Sage Warrior—that explores how spiritual practice and inner strength can fuel movements for justice and liberation guided by principles of love rather than hatred.
What Is the Sage Warrior Concept?
The Sage Warrior Retreat takes its name from both Valarie Kaur's 2024 book and Sonny Singh's 2024 album, both titled "Sage Warrior." The retreat centers on the Sikh theological concept of Sant Sipahi, which translates as "Sage Warrior." This term describes the integration of spiritual depth with courageous action for justice. Rather than positioning spirituality and activism as separate domains, the Sage Warrior framework insists they are inseparable—that contemplative practice and inner development are necessary foundations for freedom work.
The concept addresses a fundamental question for anyone engaged in justice and liberation movements: How do you sustain yourself spiritually and emotionally while fighting for change? How do you prevent the work itself from depleting your soul or turning you into someone driven by rage rather than rooted in principle?
The Connection Between Spirituality and Political Liberation
At the heart of this retreat lies an exploration of the relationship between spiritual practice and political action. Kaur and Singh recognize that this connection may resonate differently depending on your worldview. If spirituality forms the center of your life, the Sage Warrior framework offers spiritual principles for how to show up as a freedom fighter. But even if you approach justice work from a secular perspective, the core question remains the same: where does the inner strength come from to sustain a long fight for liberation?
The Sage Warrior model suggests that inner strength—whether cultivated through meditation, prayer, song, study, or other contemplative practices—is not a luxury or distraction from the work. It is prerequisite. A warrior without spiritual grounding can become bitter, burned out, or corrupted by the very power they are fighting to redistribute. A sage without willingness to act remains complicit in injustice. The Sage Warrior is both.
How Can Justice Movements Be Guided by Love?
One of the central questions the retreat addresses is: How can movements for justice and liberation be guided by principles of love? This is not a sentimental question. Love in this context means several things: refusal to demonize opponents, commitment to the inherent dignity and potential transformation of all people, choice of nonviolent methods even when violent ones might be faster, and protection of one's own humanity and the humanity of fellow fighters from being consumed by hatred.
This principle draws from Sikh history and theology, as well as other traditions of nonviolent resistance including the work of Martin Luther King Jr., Thich Nhat Hanh, and others. It asks: if our vision is a world built on justice, compassion, and liberation, can we afford to build it through methods that contradict those values? What does it cost spiritually and practically to use hatred as fuel, even against oppressors?
Who Are Valarie Kaur and Sonny Singh?
Valarie Kaur is described as an incredible public thinker, spiritual leader, civil rights leader, and author. Her work spans Sikh theology, interfaith dialogue, and grassroots movements for justice. She has been at the forefront of civil rights advocacy, particularly around religious freedom and immigrant justice, and brings decades of practice and reflection to her teaching.
Sonny Singh is a musician, activist, and spiritual teacher whose 2024 album "Sage Warrior" explores these themes through music. He brings the perspective of a cultural artist who translates spiritual and political wisdom into accessible, moving forms. The collaboration between Kaur and Singh represents a meeting of contemplative theology and artistic expression—both essential to movement building that sustains people over time.
The Retreat Setting and Dates
The first-ever Sage Warrior Retreat takes place April 17–19, 2025 at Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health in Stockbridge, Massachusetts (in the Berkshires region of Western Massachusetts). The choice of venue is significant: Kripalu is a yoga and contemplative center, emphasizing that this is not a purely political conference but an integrated retreat where spiritual practice and justice work are woven together throughout the program.
A special note: musician Shah Jistan will join the retreat on guitar for the opening gathering on April 17, adding a musical and devotional element to the experience. Registration is available through Kripalu's website.
What to Expect from the Retreat
Based on the vision outlined, the retreat appears designed to offer participants:
- Theological grounding in the Sant Sipahi concept and its application to contemporary justice work
- Time for spiritual practice, likely including meditation, kirtan (devotional singing), and prayer
- Space to reflect on how your own inner work supports your commitment to liberation
- Community with others who are trying to integrate their spiritual lives with their activism
- Practical wisdom on sustaining oneself emotionally and spiritually through long-term struggle
- Exposure to different traditions (Sikh, Buddhist, Christian, secular) that have grappled with the spirituality-activism question
Why This Retreat Matters Now
In a moment when many activists are experiencing burnout, moral injury, and despair about the possibility of change, the Sage Warrior framework offers an alternative narrative. It insists that spiritual practice is not escapism or distraction—it is the foundation from which sustained, principled, loving justice work becomes possible. It also insists that spirituality disconnected from commitment to liberation is incomplete, even hollow.
The retreat arrives at a time when the original interview featuring Sonny Singh (conducted by Kaliisi and Monte Belmonte on the Fabulous 413 radio program) has already begun to circulate these ideas more widely. The retreat represents a deepening and embodied exploration of themes that Kaur and Singh have been articulating through book, album, and interview.
Where to Go from Here
If this vision resonates with you—whether you are primarily a spiritual practitioner looking to deepen your engagement with justice, an activist seeking to reconnect with your inner life, or someone trying to hold both together—consider registering for the Sage Warrior Retreat at Kripalu. The registration link is available at kripalu.org/experiences/sage-warrior-retreat. You can also explore Valarie Kaur's book "Sage Warrior" (2024) and Sonny Singh's album of the same name to begin engaging with these themes before the retreat. Finally, seek out other teachings and practices from Sikh, Buddhist, Christian, and secular traditions that explore the Sant Sipahi / Sage Warrior path—the integration of contemplation and courageous action is an ancient human practice with many expressions.



