Rumi's mystical annihilation of ego (fana) offers a framework for understanding both the spiritual appeal and identity risks in new religious movement participation.
Rumi teaches that spiritual transformation requires the dissolution of the separate self, surrendering individual will to unite with the Divine. New religious movements often employ devotional practices—chanting, meditation, ritual repetition—that induce similar states of ego-dissolution, creating profound experiences of belonging and purpose. Followers describe losing their former identity and gaining a new one anchored in the group's worldview. While this process can catalyze genuine psychological healing and spiritual insight, it also creates vulnerability to coercive group dynamics. The Sufi tradition's emphasis on surrendering to a spiritual guide (murshid) parallels the dependency relationships that form in new movements, where members relinquish personal judgment to leadership. Examining this concept reveals the thin line between liberating spiritual surrender and psychological manipulation that erases critical thinking and individual agency within the movement.
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