Sufism is the mystical heart of Islam — the tradition that insists the outer forms of religion are vessels for an inner fire, and that the ultimate goal of the spiritual life is not obedience but annihilation in love. The great Sufi masters — Rumi, Ibn Arabi, Rabia al-Adawiyya, Al-Hallaj, Hafiz — teach through poetry, paradox, and the transmission that passes between teacher and student in ways that cannot be reduced to doctrine. To enter the Sufi path is to discover that the God the legalists describe is only the beginning — that beyond every concept of the divine is the Beloved who was never absent for a single moment.
Each step builds on the last.