Rumi's concept of fana—dissolving the self in divine presence—corresponds with Shinto purification rites that erase individual impurity and restore sacred wholeness.
Fana, the Sufi dissolution of ego in divine unity, finds striking parallel in Shinto's understanding of purification through misogi and temizu rituals. When a devotee cleanses hands and mouth at the shrine entrance, they perform more than hygiene—they enact a symbolic death of the separate self, washing away the dust of ordinary consciousness. Rumi's ecstatic loss of self in divine presence echoes the Shinto experience of surrendering individual will to kami guidance. The shrine becomes a threshold where normal social identity dissolves, and the purified self emerges in direct relationship with the sacred. This is not annihilation but transformation: the individual returns to community refined, emptied of ego-obstruction, aligned with kami will. Both traditions recognize that spiritual progress requires this radical emptying. The Japanese concept of ma—sacred emptiness—deepens this understanding, suggesting that purification creates the void where kami presence can manifest most fully and the soul can experience its essential nature.
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