The Sufi dissolution of ego through love, where the individual self merges with the divine, becoming the essential path to liberation in Rumi's teaching.
Fana, often translated as annihilation or dissolution, represents the obliteration of the nafs (ego) through overwhelming devotion and love for the divine. In Rumi's Sufi tradition, this is not destruction but transformation—the false self dissolves so that only divine reality remains. Rumi teaches that liberation cannot occur while the ego insists on separation; the lover must become nothing so that only the Beloved exists. This concept directly addresses Nirvana, understood not as escape from existence but as the cessation of illusory separation. Through fana, the soul recognizes its eternal unity with the divine source. Rumi's whirling ceremony embodies this principle: the spinning dervish becomes a channel for divine presence, transcending personal will. The path requires surrendering all attachments, desires, and identifications with the material world. In this annihilation lies true liberation—not the absence of consciousness, but consciousness freed from the prison of individual limitation and suffering.
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