Rumi's goal of ego-death through love parallels the deliberate dissolution of self in possession trance, where the individual consciousness yields to divine presence.
Central to Rumi's teaching is the annihilation of the separate self (fana), the mystical death of ego that allows divine reality to manifest. This is not metaphorical death but experienced dissolution—the 'I' must shatter so that only 'He' remains. In Vodou, Candomblé, and Santería, possession trance enacts this same principle: the individual consciousness steps back, the spirit steps forward, and the body becomes a vessel of divine presence. The mounted person is no longer themselves; they are the Lwa, the Orixá, the saint. This ecstatic dissolution is rehearsed, cultivated, and celebrated—it is the apex of devotional life. Both traditions recognize that ego-death is not pathological but liberatory; it grants access to knowledge, healing, and power unavailable to the bounded individual mind. Rumi's Sufi dervishes and African diaspora initiated priests undergo similar training: learning to welcome the dissolution that brings transcendence.
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