Rumi expresses complaint, rage, and despair toward the divine as authentic devotion; Indigenous South American spirituality similarly honors honest emotional expression in ceremony and prayer.
Rumi shocks readers with his accusations toward God—'Why do you hide?' 'Why do you torment me?' His complaint is passionate, not impious. This radical honesty mirrors Indigenous South American ceremonial prayer: participants voice suffering, anger at injustice, and confused longing directly to spirit without prettification. In Andean ceremonies, grief and rage toward Pachamama for hardship are voiced alongside gratitude. Amazonian shamans sing complaint songs (icaros) that express the difficulty of existence. Both traditions refuse the Western spiritual culture of positivity and forced gratitude, recognizing that authentic relationship with the sacred requires honest emotional expression, including anger and despair. This concept validates Indigenous ceremonial expression as legitimate spiritual practice, not primitive emotionalism, demonstrating that the sacred is strong enough to hold human rage, grief, and complaint.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.