Mevlevi Sema Ceremony
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Sema Ceremony |
Mevleviye are known for their famous practice of whirling dances. At
their dancing ceremonies, or Sema, a particular musical repertoire
called ayin is played. This is based on four sections of both vocal and
instrumental compositions using contrasting rhythmic cycles and is
performed by at least one singer, a flute-player (neyzen), a
kettledrummer and a cymbal player. The oldest musical compositions stem
from the mid-sixteenth century combining Persian and Turkish musical
traditions. The repertoire was continuously broadened, and the first
notations were made from the early twentieth century onwards.
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Whirling Dervishes |
Dancers would receive 1,001 days of reclusive training within the
mevlevihane, a sort of cloister, where they learnt about ethics, codes
of behaviour and beliefs by living a practice of prayer, religious
music, poetry and dance. After this training, they remained members of
the order but went back to their work and families, combining
spiritualism with civic life.
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Whirling Dervishes |
Following a recommended fast of several hours, the whirlers begin to
rotate on their left feet in short twists, using the right foot to drive
their bodies around the left foot. The body of the whirler is meant to
be supple with eyes open, but unfocused so that images become blurred
and flowing. The Sematakes place in a large circular-shaped room that is
part of the mevlevihane building. As a result of secularisation
policies, all mevlevihane were closed in 1925. Many practitioners kept
their tradition alive in private gatherings, and thirty years later, the
Turkish government began to allow performances again, though only in
public. From the 1990s, restrictions were eased and private groups
re-emerged who try to re-establish the original spiritual and intimate
character of the Sema ceremony.
During the thirty years of clandestiny, transmission focused rather on
music and songs than on spiritual and religious traditions because the
latter were forbidden. Today, the performances have been mostly deprived
of their religious significance, with the consequence that they are no
longer performed in their traditional context but in front of tourist
audiences. The length of the sema ceremony has been truncated to cater
commercial requirements, and a number of musical styles related to the
rituals are in danger of disappearing altogether.
text copyright © UNESCO 2005
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