The Sufi concept of fana (self-annihilation) as a lens for understanding Greek and Roman mystical experiences of ego-dissolution in divine encounter.
Central to Rumi's spiritual vision is fana—the mystical annihilation of the separate self in union with the Beloved. This paradoxical state of losing oneself to find oneself echoes throughout Greco-Roman religious experience, particularly in mystery cults and ecstatic worship. The initiate at the Eleusinian Mysteries underwent a ritual death and rebirth, symbolically annihilating their ordinary identity. Similarly, the devotee possessed by Dionysus transcended individual consciousness, merging with divine ecstasy. Rumi's teachings suggest these were not psychological aberrations but authentic spiritual states where the boundaries of ego dissolved before something infinitely greater. The Roman Stoics, too, spoke of submitting the individual will to divine reason, a form of ego-transcendence. By understanding fana through Rumi's language of longing and surrender, we recognize that ancient Greco-Roman religion at its mystical core sought the same transcendent obliteration of separateness that Sufi masters cultivated.
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