Whirling Dervishes
Known to the west as Whirling Dervishes,
the members of the Mevlevi Order (named for their founder
Mevlana) from
Konya lived in what we
might call coisters or monasteries - what to them was a Mevlevihane. The one at
Galata in
Istanbul is a product
of late Ottoman
architecture, and quite
elaborate in having a tomb, a large chamber for the ceremony of the whirling
dance (Sema), a fountain from which water was charitably distributed to the
public, a time keeper's room, cells for the dervishes, separate quarters for the
Master, a section for women,
a chamber of silence, a large ornate fountain for
ablutions, and a
laundry room.
The Mevlevi Order founded by
Mevlana in
Konya during the
Seljuk period is made up
first and foremost of
tekke
analogous to the monasteries of the West. The first of these
tekkes is
named for Mevlana and
was considered as the originator of all the rest. One figure stands out in the
early spread of the order: Divani Mehmet Celebi. The celebis or gentle ones who
went out to break new ground and make converts saw themselves as disciples of
this great master, and an astonishing number of
tekkes were
established during Divani Mehmet Celebi's lifetime and thanks to his efforts; in
Aleppo, Egypt and Algeria, on the islands of Chios (Sakiz) and Mitilene, and of
course on the Turkish
mainland. The Galata
Mevlevihane is among these latter.
The rituals of the Rumi's followers (Whirling
Dervishes) are among the enduring as well as the most exquisite ceremonies of
spirituality. The ritual whirling of the dervishes is an act of love and a drama
of faith. It possesses a highly structured form within which the gentle turns
become increasingly dynamic as the individual dervishes strive to achieve a
state of trans. The music
that accompanies the whirling from beginning to end ranges from somber to
rhapsodical; its effect is intended to be mesmerizing. Chanting of poetry,
rhythmic rotation, and incessant
music create a
synthesis which, according to the faithful, induces a feeling of soaring, of
ecstasy, of mystical flight.
The Mevlevi sect belongs to the
Sunni or orthodox
mainstream of Islam. Its
doctrine never developed a revolutionary strategy - and although it was
occasionally criticized for its heretical ideas, it always enjoyed the respect
of the officialdom.
Many later
Ottoman Sultans,
including Mehmed, the
Conqueror of Istanbul,
were enamored of Mevlevi ideals. The reformist Sultan Selim III was virtually a
member. Suleyman,
probably the greatest of the
Sultans, held the
Mevlevi dervishes in high esteem and their semahane (whirling hall) constructed
for them as his imperial gift. The hall/mosque
stands next to Rumi's
mausoleum in Konya.
The Whirling Dervishes played a vitally
important part in the evolution of
Ottoman high culture.
From the 14th to the 20th century , their impact on classical poetry,
calligraphy, and the visual arts
was profound, while music
was perhaps their greatest achievement. Since the dogmatists of
Islam's orthodoxy opposed
music as being harmful
to the listener and detrimental to religious life, no sacred
music or
mosque
music evolved except
for the Mevlud, a poem in praise of the
Prophet Muhammed,
chanted on high occasions or as a requiem.
Rumi and his followers
integrated music into
their rituals as an article of faith. In his verses,
Rumi emphasized that
music uplifts our
spirit to realms above, and we hear the tunes of the Gates of Paradise. The
meeting places of the dervishes, consequently, became academies of
art,
music, and dance.
Today, the performances of The Whirling Dervishes includes twelve musicians (on
traditional Turkish
instruments) and 12 dancers. There is also a master of ceremony. A
performance is broken into two parts with the introduction conducted by the
master followed by 3 or 4 pieces of
music. This is
followed by a 4-part whirling ceremony.
The Ritual of Sema
The fundamental condition of our existence is to
revolve. There is no object, no being which does not revolve. The shared
similarity between all created things is the revolution of the electrons,
protons, and neutrons within the atoms that constitute their basic structure.
From the smallest cell to the planets and the farthest stars, everything takes
part in this revolving. Thus, The Semazens, the ones who whirl, participate
consciously in the shared revolution of all existence.
The Sema ceremony represents a spiritual journey;
the seeker's turning toward God and truth, a maturing through love, the
transformation of self as a way of union with God, and the return to life as the
servant of all creation.
The Semazen (with a
camel's-felt hat
representing a tombstone and a wide white skirt symbolizing the death shroud),
upon removing his black cloth, is spiritually born to Truth. The semazens stand
with their arms crossed, ready to begin their turn. In their erect posture, they
represent the number one, testifying to God's unity. Each rotation takes them
past the sheikh,
who stands on a red sheep skin. This is the place of
Mevlana Celaleddin-i Rumi
, and the sheikh is understood to be a channel for the divine grace. At the
start of each of the four movements of the ceremony, the semazens bow to each
other honoring the spirit within. As their arms unfold, the right hand opens to
the skies in prayer, ready
to receive God's beneficence. The left hand, upon which his gaze rests, is
turned towards the earth in the gesture of bestowal.
Fix-footed, the semazen provides a point of
contact with this Earth through which the divine blessings can flow. Turning
from right to left, he embraces all creation as he chants the name of God within
the heart. The Sema ritual consists of seven parts:
- It starts with the singing of the Nat-i-Serif,
a eulogy to the Prophet
Muhammed (peace be upon him), who represents love. Praising him is
praising the truth of God that he and all the
prophets before
him brought.
- Then follows the call of the drum and the
slap of glory, calling the semazens to awaken and Be. This begins the
procession known as the Sultan Veled Walk. It is the salutation of one soul to
another, acknowledged by bowing.
- Then begins the Sema ritual itself. It
consists of four selams or salutes. The first selam is the birth of truth by
way of knowledge. The second selam expresses the rapture of witnessing the
splendor of creation. The third selam is the transformation of rapture into
love; the sacrifice of mind and self to love. It represents complete
submission and communion with God. The fourth selam is the semazen's coming to
terms with his destiny and his return to his task in creation. In the fourth
selam, the
sheikh enters the circling dervishes, where he assumes the place of the
sun in the center of the circling planets.
- The Sema end with a reading from the
Qur'an. The
sheikh and
dervishes complete their time together with the greeting of peace and then
depart, accompanied by joyous
music of their
departure.
One of the beauties of this seven-centuries-old
ritual is the way that it unifies the three fundamental components of man's
nature; mind, emotion, and spirit, combining them in a practice and a worship
that seeks the purification of all three in the turning towards Divine Unity.
But most significantly, the enrichment of this earth and the well-being of
humanity as a whole.
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