The mystical experience of personality-death that precedes unity with the infinite—foundational to understanding miraculous intervention across religions.
Fana, the Sufi doctrine of annihilation or extinction, describes the complete obliteration of individual identity in union with the Divine. It is not psychological pathology but the ultimate goal of the devotional path. Rumi emphasizes that fana is paradoxically accompanied by baqa, the eternal subsistence in God—one does not cease to exist but ceases to exist *as separate*. This state is described as dying before death, enabling the mystic to witness miracles from a consciousness no longer bound by ego limitations. Across traditions, the Christian mystic's unio mystica, the Hindu adept's moksha, and the Buddhist's Nirvana approach this same territory of self-transcendence. Fana is not achieved through intellectual understanding alone but through devotional practice, prayer, and love. Those who have experienced genuine fana report a radical freedom from fear, desire, and illusion—conditions that permit them to perceive and become channels for divine grace in ways unavailable to the ego-bound consciousness.
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