Rumi's concept of fana (dissolution of ego) as the antidote to humanity's dominating posture toward nature in animistic perspective.
Rumi's mystical goal of fana—the complete annihilation of the separate, grasping ego—stands in direct opposition to the modern stance of dominion over nature. Animism has always rejected hierarchy; it understands humans as one voice in a conversation of many beings, each with their own subjectivity and rights. The ecological crisis emerges precisely from the ego's demand to master, own, and exploit. When we practice fana through contemplation and service to something greater than ourselves, we simultaneously dissolve the illusion of human supremacy. This is not humiliation but liberation: freedom from the exhausting pretense of control. Rumi writes that the lover becomes nothing so that the Beloved can be everything. In animistic terms, when we release our demand for dominion, we recover our true place as kin among countless kin. Practices of voluntary simplicity, listening more than speaking, asking permission from the land, and offering service without expectation of return all embody this annihilation of the dominating self.
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