The name Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi stands for Love and ecstatic flight into the infinite.
Mevlana is one of the great spiritual masters and poetical geniuses of mankind and was
the founder of the Mevlevi Sufi order, a leading mystical brotherhood of Islam.
Rumi was born in Balkh (Afghanistan) in 1207 to a family of learned theologians.
Escaping the Mongol invasion, Rumi and his family travelled extensively in the Muslim
lands, performed the pilgrimage to Mecca and finally settled in Konya, Anatolia (Turkey),
where he succeeded his father in 1231 as professor in religious sciences.
He was introduced into the mystical path by a wandering dervish, Shamsuddin of Tabriz.
His love and his bereavement for the death of Shams found their expression in a surge of
music, dance and lyric poems, `Divani Samsi Tabrizzi'. Rumi is the author of a huge
didactic work, The `Mathnawi', and discourses, `Fihi ma Fihi', written to introduce his
disciples to metaphysics. If there is `Fihi ma Fihi', written to introduce his disciples to
metaphysics. If there is any general idea underlying Rumi's poetry, it is the absolute love
of God. His influence on thought, literature and all forms of aesthetic expression in the
world of Islam cannot be overrated.
Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi died on December 17, 1273. Men of five faiths followed his
bier. That night was named Sebul Arus (Night of Union). Ever since, the Mevlevi
dervishes have kept that date as a festival.
The Mevlevi rites symbolise divine love and mystical ecstasy; they aim at union with the
Divine. The music and the dance are designed to induce meditation on the love of God.
Mevlevi music contains some of the most valuable elements of Turkish classical music. It
serves mainly as accompaniment for poems of Rumi and other Sufi poets. The music of
the sema (ceremony) is generally conducted by the chief drummer. Percussion
accompaniment is supplied by the kudums (small kettledrums) and cymbals; melody is
provided by the ney (reed flute), the string instruments and the voice. The words and
even syllables of the poetry are connected to the musical sentences. "Dervish music
cannot be written in notes. Notes do not include the soul of "Dervish music cannot be
written in notes. Notes do not include the soul of the dervish."
The dervishes turn timelessly and effortlessly. They whirl, turning round on their own axis
and moving also in orbit. The right hand is turned up towards heaven to receive God's
overflowing mercy which passes through the heart and is transmitted to earth with the
downturned left hand. While one foot remains firmly on the ground, the other crosses it
and propels the dancer round. The rising and falling of the right foot is kept constant by
the inner rhythmic repetition of the name of "Allah-Al-lah, Al-lah..." The ceremony can be
seen as a great crescendo in three stages: knowing God, seeing God and uniting with
God.
The steps of the way to union with the Divine are performed according to strict rules.
Within a circle the sheikh stands at the "post". It is the highest spiritual position, marked
by a red rug indicating the direction of Mecca. Red is the colour of union and of the
manifested world. The musicians' platform faces. There are 24 colour of union and of the
manifested world. The musicians' platform faces the sheikh; the whirling dervishes take
their places to his left.
The N'aat, a poem of praise to the Prophet, opens the ceremony. It is followed by a
recitation from the Qur'an. The kudums (drums) then break the silence to introduce the
flute solo that conveys the yearning for the union with God. The next step is the Sultan
Veled Walk when the dervishes, following the sheikh, circle the hall three times, stopping
to bow to each other at the "post".
The first selam (salutation) introduces the dance: by kissing the hand of the sheikh, the
dervish obtains his permission to whirl. The master of the dance directs him to his
position: As the musicians play and the chorus chants, the sheikh stands at the "post" and
the dervishes unfold and turn repeating their inaudible "Allah, Allah, Allah. . ." This part of
the ceremony lasts approximately ten minutes and is repeated four times. At the fourth
selam the sheikh joins the whirling. He represents the centre (the sun); the dervishes
represent the orbiting planets turning around him and around themselves in the solar
system of Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi.
The Ceremony is concluded by the recitation of the Fatiha, the opening The Ceremony is
concluded by the recitation of the Fatiha, the opening chapter of the Qur'an, followed by
a prayer to Mevlana and Shamsuddin of Tabriz. Then all the dervishes join in sounding
the "Hu" which is the all-embracing Name of God, the One.
The Ceremony
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