Rumi's mystical union with the Beloved mirrors the ultimate devotional aim across Sikhism, Jainism, and Zoroastrianism: direct experience of the sacred.
In Rumi's poetry, the Beloved represents God or ultimate reality—a personal, intimate encounter with divinity through overwhelming love. This resonates deeply with Sikhism's concept of merger with Waheguru, Jainism's liberation through pure consciousness, and Zoroastrianism's communion with Ahura Mazda. Each tradition emphasizes that spiritual truth is not merely intellectual but experiential and transformative. For Sikhs, naam simran (remembrance) mirrors the devotional ecstasy Rumi describes. Jains recognize this longing as the soul's natural yearning to shed karma and return to its pure state. Zoroastrians see the divine relationship as one of ethical partnership with the cosmic Good. Rumi's teaching that love obliterates the self's illusions aligns with all three paths—dissolving ego-attachment reveals the sacred reality always present.
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