The ache in Rumi's verse for reunion with the Divine mirrors humanity's deep homesickness for kinship with the living earth.
Rumi's poetry throbs with longing—for reunion, for home, for the obliteration of separation from the Beloved. This achingly human emotion reflects something animism knew for millennia: we are homesick for a world we never truly left. In severing our understanding of nature as animate and sacred, modern civilization severed us from ourselves. Animistic worldviews maintain that humans belong within nature's community, not above it. Our contemporary ecological anxiety, grief, and restlessness may be Rumi's longing translated into our time—a spiritual homesickness for reunion with the ensouled earth. Indigenous ceremonies and practices are sustained by this longing, too, expressed as commitment to ancestral lands and future generations. By naming this ache and following it consciously, we can move from alienation toward the homecoming that animism and Sufi mysticism both describe: the recognition that we never truly departed from the sacred animate world.
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