The Sufi practice of dissolving individual ego to merge with something greater, applied as a framework for uniting diverse community members under shared purpose.
Fana, the Sufi concept of annihilation of self in union with the Divine, offers community organizers a counterintuitive tool for building unity. Rabia taught that personal ambition and recognition must dissolve into pure devotion—a practice that directly challenges the ego-driven activism that fragments movements. When organizers and members practice fana in community work, they release attachment to personal credit, territorial turf, or winning arguments. This creates space for genuine listening, coalition-building across difference, and emergence of distributed leadership. The practice doesn't mean abandoning identity; rather, it means holding identity lightly enough to prioritize collective liberation. Fana transforms how conflicts arise and resolve within communities—disagreements become opportunities for deeper alignment rather than power struggles, enabling groups to stay focused on the communities they serve rather than internal hierarchies.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.