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Encyclopedia > Whirling Dervishes

The Mevlevi Order or the Mevleviye are a Sufi order founded by the followers of the Persian Jalal al-Din Muhammad Rumi in 1273 in Konya present day Turkey; also known as The Whirling Dervishes, sometimes called the Howling Dervishes or the Dancing Dervishes due to their famous practice of whirling as a form of meditation. (The Dervish are members of Sufi wandering ascetic religious Tarika or "confraternities", known for their extreme poverty and austerity.)

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Whirling Dervishes perform near the Mevlevi Museum in Konya, Turkey.

The Mevlevi, or Mevleviye, one of the most well-known of the Sufi orders, was founded in 1273 by Rumi's followers after his death, particularly his son, Sultan Veled Celebi. The Mevlevi, or "The Whirling Dervishes", believe that union with God can be attained in a dance and music ceremony called sema.


Sema represents a mystical journey of man's spiritual ascent through mind and love to "Perfect." Turning towards the truth, the follower grows through love, deserts his ego, finds the truth and arrives to the "Perfect." He then returns from this spiritual journey as a man who has reached maturity and a greater perfection, so as to love and to be of service to the whole of creation, to all creatures without discrimination as to belief, race, class or national origin.


The Mevlevi were a well established Sufi Order in the Ottoman Empire, and many of the members of the Order served in various official positions of the Caliphate. The centre for the Mevlevi order is in Konya, in Turkey, where Rumi is buried. There is also a Mevlevi monastery or durgah in Istanbul, near the Galata Tower, where the sema ceremony is performed and accessible to the public. The Mevlevi Order is also linked to other Dervish orders such as the Kadiris (founded in 1165), the Rifais (founded in 1182) and the Kalenderis.


The Mevlevi Order was outlawed in Turkey at the dawn of the secular revolution by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1923. In the 1950s, the Turkish government, realizing that The Whirling Dervishes had value as a tourist attraction, began allowing the Whirling Dervishes to perform annuallly in Konya on the Urs of Mevlana, December 17, the anniversary of Rumi's death. In 1974, they were allowed to come to the West. They performed in France, for the Pope, and at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and other venues in the US and Canada under the direction of the late Mevlevi Shaikh Suleyman Hayati Dede.



See also: Sufi whirling


External link

  • DankPhotos.com: Whirling Dervishes: The Search for Spirituality (http://www.dankphotos.com/whirling/index.shtml)
  • Whirling Dervish, painted in 1998; One of Acar's famous paintings (http://www.ismailacar.com.tr/DvisHtml/011.htm) *Whirling Dervish, painted by Ismail Acar in 1998 (http://www.ismailacar.com.tr/DvisHtml/007.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Mevlevi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (492 words)
Whirling Dervishes perform near the Mevlevi Museum in Konya, Turkey.
The Mevlevi, or "The Whirling Dervishes", believe in performing their dhirk in the form of a 'dance' and music ceremony called the sema.
Whirling Dervish, painted in 1998; One of Acar's famous paintings
  More results at FactBites »


 

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