How Rumi's mystical yearning for unity with the divine mirrors the Aztec and Maya understanding of sacrifice as passionate communion with the gods.
In Rumi's poetry, longing (ishtiyaq) represents the soul's irresistible pull toward the Beloved—a devotional ache that drives spiritual transformation. The Aztec and Maya conceived of human and ritual sacrifice not as punishment, but as an act of profound devotion and reciprocal love with the divine. Both traditions understood that separation from the sacred creates a cosmic hunger that only union can satisfy. For the Aztecs, the nextlaoaliztli (debt payment) through blood sacrifice embodied this longing, a lover's gesture to sustain the gods and renew creation. Rumi's ecstatic union through love-poetry finds its parallel in the Maya k'inich (sun lord) worship, where priests embodied divine connection through ritual. This concept reveals how ancient Mesoamerican religion was fundamentally a love affair between humanity and cosmos, not merely transactional obligation.
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