RUMI’S MYSTICAL ONTOLOGY IN HIS POETRY
Rumi's nostalgia has always attracted the soul of the enchanted and wise human in the valley of mysticism. This nostalgia is crystallized from centuries of human thought, which has been developed by human conflict for self-knowledge. The total extract in Rumi’s immortal works, especially in his two famous works, the Mathnavi Manavi and the Divan Shams, is love, which builds the main pillar of Rumi’s ontology. Hence, the school of Rumi is called “the school of love” and he has been called the “prophet of Love.”
While nobody left any comments to this publication.
You can be first.
Chittick, William C. The Sufi Doctrine of Rumi. World Wisdom, 2005. Print.
Chittick, William C. Sufism: A Beginner’s Guide. One world, 2000, Print.
Deleuze Gilles, Guattari Felix. What Is Philosophy? Columbia UP, 1991, Print. Nicholson, R.A. THE MATHNAWÍOFJALÁLU’DDÍN RÚMÍ. Poetry Soup, 2011. Print.
Schimmel, Annemarie. Mystical Dimensions of Islam. The University of North Carolina Press, 1975. Print.
Shahriari, Shahriar. Divane-Shams and Translation from Divane-Shams. Canada, 1998. Print.