A significant attraction for visitors from around the world is the magic of meditation performed by the whirling dervishes, a form of dance where these dervishes spin to let go of their ego and worldly desire.
To prepare for the ritual ahead, Ömer Kılıç and his 14-year-old son dress in white robes, drape black cloaks over themselves and don cone-shaped hats called “sikke.”
The tennure robes symbolize funeral shrouds, the cloaks a tomb and the hats a tombstone – outfits that are part of a centuries-old tradition performed by the whirling dervishes of Türkiye.
The dervishes, a Sufi order of Islam that is rooted in mysticism, are chiefly known for the “sama” ritual in which they spin in unison with prayers and verses from the Quran.
Kılıç has belonged to the order for 23 years. Now a tennure tailor, he is teaching his craft to his apprentice and son, Toprak Efe Kılıç.
Kılıç says the religious path first appeared to him in a dream. He decided to start training as a dervish a few days later.
Each year, the dervishes of the Mevlevi Order perform their unmistakable act of devotion in the Turkish city of Konya, where thousands of people attend a weeklong series of events and ceremonies that mark the death of the 13th-century Islamic poet, scholar and Sufi philosopher Jalaluddin Rumi.
Rumi, who is known as Mevlana in Türkiye, was born in 1207 in Balkh, a city that now is part of Afghanistan. He settled in Konya in central Türkiye, where he died on Dec. 17, 1273. He is regarded as one of the most important Sufi philosophers, and members of the Mevlevi Order follow his teachings.
Instead of mourning his death, the ceremonies in Konya celebrate what his followers believe is Rumi’s union with God. The main feature of the “Şeb-i Arus,” or “night of the union,” is the ritual in which the whirling dervishes revolve with their right hands symbolically turned up toward God and their left hands turned down toward the earth.
Ahmet Sami Küçük, the head of the dervishes in Konya, described the whirling as an “end” and a state one attains after years of training and discipline.
In 2005, the U.N. cultural agency proclaimed the practice as an example of “the oral and intangible heritage of humanity.”
The structure hosting Rumi’s tomb in Konya is a museum and a pilgrimage site. One pilgrim, Mohammad Mobeen Dervesh, a Kashmiri living in the United Kingdom, said all lovers of God come to the site to honor Rumi.
Two years after the COVID-19 pandemic's strict lockdowns, tourism official Abdulsettar Yarar said the site attracted more than 3.1 million visitors this year, 10% of them from abroad.