Periagoge
Concept
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Annihilation of Self in Divine Union

Fana, or annihilation of the separate self, is Rumi's central practice for transcending the dark night by dissolving the boundary between lover and beloved.

Rumi
Why It Matters

Fana—the obliteration of individual will and identity—stands at the heart of Rumi's response to spiritual crisis. Rather than fighting the dark night's disorientation, the Sufi moves toward it, consciously surrendering the illusion of separation from the divine. This is not suicide or pathology but the deliberate death of the false self that clings to worldly attachment and ego protection. Through practices of devotion, whirling, and surrender, the seeker experiences their separate existence as an obstacle to love. Rumi teaches that what feels like annihilation—the loss of control, certainty, and familiar identity—is actually the soul's liberation into its true nature. The dark night ends when the self ceases to exist as a barrier between the human and the infinite.

Helpful guides
Rumi
Faith & Meaning
Peri
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