The mystical practice of constant attachment to God through love and intention, central to both Sufi devotion and Hasidic spirituality.
Devekuth, or cleaving to the Divine, represents the ultimate goal of Hasidic practice—a state of unbroken connection with God achieved through love, prayer, and intention. Rumi's poetry embodies this very longing: the soul's desperate yearning to dissolve into union with the Beloved. In Kabbalah, devekuth emerges as the practical culmination of mystical study and meditation, where the individual consciousness merges with higher Sefirot. The Hasidic masters taught that devekuth could be achieved not only through ascetic withdrawal but through joyful service and everyday acts performed with sacred intention. This bridges Rumi's ecstatic love poetry with the Hasidic emphasis on bringing holiness into ordinary life, transforming devotion from abstract philosophy into lived spiritual experience.
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