The Sufi practice of annihilating the ego to unite with the divine, redefining faith as surrender rather than belief.
Fana, or annihilation of the self, represents the apex of Sufi spiritual practice and offers a radical reconceptualization of faith. For Rumi and the Sufi tradition, faith is not intellectual assent to doctrine but the progressive dissolving of the separate self until only divine presence remains. This is not nihilism but liberation—the ego's barriers dissolve like salt in the ocean. In cross-traditional terms, fana reframes faith from a mental property into an experiential transformation. It suggests that true faith requires dying before death, surrendering attachments, certainties, and identity. This concept challenges Western religious assumptions that faith requires a stable believing subject, instead proposing that faith emerges when that subject surrenders entirely. Fana demonstrates that faith can be understood as a process of unbecoming rather than becoming, fundamentally shifting how we define spiritual commitment across traditions.
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