Rumi teaches that love is the cosmic principle underlying existence; African cosmologies similarly recognize relational force—Ubuntu, interconnection—as the foundation of all being and becoming.
Central to Rumi's metaphysical vision is the principle that love—not abstract intellect—animates the universe and draws all beings toward unity. African philosophical concepts like Ubuntu ('I am because we are') reflect a parallel understanding: existence is fundamentally relational, interconnected, and animated by the life-force or vital energy present in all beings. Both traditions reject the notion of isolated individualism in favor of recognizing that personhood, purpose, and power emerge through connection. In Rumi's poetry, separation from the Beloved causes suffering; in African cosmologies, disconnection from community, land, and ancestors creates spiritual imbalance and sickness. This concept examines how love operates not sentimentally but as an ontological force—the very structure of reality. For Indigenous African spiritualities, this love manifests through practices of reciprocity, ritual care for relationships with spirits and ancestors, and stewardship of sacred landscapes. Understanding love as a fundamental creative force reshapes ethics, healing, and how communities organize themselves around responsibility to all relations.
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