What is Mevlevi Order?
The Mevlevi Order (Turkish: Mevlevilik; Arabic: الطريقة المولوية, al-Ṭarīqah al-Mawlawīyah) is a Sufi Islamic mystical order founded in the 13th century by followers of the Persian poet and mystic Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi. Best known in the West as the “Whirling Dervishes,” the Mevlevis practice a distinctive form of active meditation called the sema—a ceremonial spinning dance accompanied by sacred music and poetry designed to bring practitioners into direct experiential union with the Divine. The order represents one of the major tariqa (spiritual paths) within Islamic mysticism, emphasizing divine love (ishq), spiritual music (sama), poetry, and the abandonment of ego as paths to experiencing God’s presence.
Origins & Lineage
The Mevlevi Order emerged in Konya, Anatolia (present-day Turkey) following the death of Jalal ad-Din Rumi on December 17, 1273 CE. While Rumi himself did not establish a formal order, his son Sultan Walad (1226–1312) and his disciples systematized his teachings and spiritual practices into an organized tariqa. The name “Mevlevi” derives from “Mawlana” (our master), the honorific by which Rumi’s followers addressed him.
Rumi had studied under the wandering mystic Shams-e Tabrizi, whose mysterious appearance in Konya in 1244 and subsequent disappearance catalyzed Rumi’s transformation from Islamic scholar to ecstatic poet-mystic. The spiritual friendship between Rumi and Shams inspired much of Rumi’s poetry, including portions of his masterwork, the Mathnawi (or Masnavi), a six-volume spiritual epic completed around 1270. The Mathnawi, along with Rumi’s collection of lyric poetry, the Divan-e Shams-e Tabrizi, became foundational texts for Mevlevi practice.
The order established its primary center at the türbe (shrine-complex) containing Rumi’s tomb in Konya, which remains a pilgrimage site. By the 14th century, the Mevlevis had spread throughout the Ottoman Empire, establishing lodges (mevlevihane or dergah) in major cities including Istanbul, Cairo, Damascus, and Baghdad. The order enjoyed particular favor with Ottoman rulers, who valued the Mevlevis’ cultural sophistication and non-political approach to spirituality.
How It’s Practiced
The central practice of the Mevlevi Order is the sema ceremony, a ritualized meditation consisting of whirling dance, live music, and recitation. Practitioners (semazens) wear symbolic clothing: a tall brown felt hat (sikke) representing the ego’s tombstone, a white shroud-like garment (tennure) symbolizing the ego’s death, and a black cloak (hırka) representing the worldly tomb, which is removed before whirling begins.
The sema follows a precise structure developed over centuries. It begins with a na’t (hymn in praise of the Prophet Muhammad), followed by improvised instrumental taksim on the ney (reed flute). The ceremony progresses through four selams (greetings or sections), each representing stages of spiritual ascent: recognition of God, rapture before Divine power, dissolution in Divine love, and return to service. Semazens spin counterclockwise with right palm raised upward (receiving from heaven) and left palm facing downward (transmitting to earth), becoming channels between Divine and earthly realms.
Beyond the sema, traditional Mevlevi training included a 1,001-day retreat period during which initiates lived in a lodge under the guidance of a sheikh, performing manual labor, studying Rumi’s poetry, learning calligraphy and music, practicing meditation, and gradually being taught the physical discipline of whirling. Daily practices included dhikr (remembrance of God through repetitive prayer), study of the Quran and Mathnawi, and adherence to Islamic ritual prayer and fasting.
Mevlevi Order Today
The Mevlevi Order, like all Sufi orders in Turkey, was legally banned in 1925 under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’s secularization reforms. The Konya lodge was converted into a museum. However, the order continued to exist in diaspora communities and through underground transmission in Turkey. Since the 1950s, the sema has been permitted as a “cultural performance” rather than religious practice, leading to a complex distinction between devotional sema practiced by initiated Mevlevis and theatrical presentations for tourists.
Contemporary seekers encounter Mevlevi teachings through several channels. The tomb and museum in Konya hosts an annual commemoration of Rumi’s death (Şeb-i Arus, “Wedding Night”) each December 10–17, featuring sema performances that draw thousands of visitors. Various Mevlevi branches operate in diaspora, including communities in Europe, North America, and the Middle East, some maintaining traditional initiation and training structures.
In the West, Mevlevi-inspired whirling has been adopted within wellness and conscious spirituality contexts, often detached from its Islamic framework. Some teachers offer weekend workshops in “Sufi whirling” or “turning” as a meditative practice. The Threshold Society, founded by Kabir Helminski in California, represents one Western approach that maintains connection to traditional Mevlevi lineage while making teachings accessible to non-Muslims.
Common Misconceptions
The Mevlevi Order is not a dance troupe or performance art, though sema is frequently presented as such. Authentic sema is a religious devotional practice, a form of dhikr intended to cultivate fana (annihilation of ego) and baqa (subsistence in God). While beautiful to observe, its purpose is internal transformation, not entertainment.
The order is not separable from Islam. Despite Western appropriation that extracts whirling from its religious context, the Mevlevi path is grounded in Islamic theology, Quranic study, Sharia observance, and specifically Sufi metaphysics. Rumi was an Islamic scholar and sheikh, and his poetry presumes Islamic cosmology.
Mevlevi practice is not simply spinning in circles. The sema requires years of physical training, spiritual preparation, and initiation into symbolic meanings. Random spinning without proper instruction, context, and intention is not Mevlevi practice. The order also encompasses far more than whirling: it includes a comprehensive spiritual curriculum of study, service, music, calligraphy, and character development.
Finally, not all Sufism is Mevlevi, and not all Mevlevis approve of Western adaptations. The Sufi tradition includes hundreds of distinct orders with varied practices, and there is ongoing debate within Mevlevi communities about the appropriateness of teaching sema outside traditional Islamic contexts.
How to Begin
Those interested in authentic Mevlevi teachings should begin with Rumi’s works in reputable translations: Coleman Barks’ versions are poetic but often omit Islamic references; for scholarly accuracy, consult translations by Reynold Nicholson (Mathnawi), or more recently, Jawid Mojaddedi. The Mathnawi remains the order’s central teaching text, sometimes called “the Quran in Persian.”
Attend a live sema ceremony if possible, approaching it as a devotional service rather than performance. The annual Konya commemoration offers immersion in the tradition’s heartland, though it now attracts massive crowds. Smaller gatherings occur at active Mevlevi centers in Istanbul, Cairo, and Damascus, as well as diaspora communities in major Western cities.
For practice, seek teachers with verifiable transmission lineage. The Threshold Society offers introductory programs in North America that balance accessibility with traditional grounding. Some established Mevlevi sheikhs in Turkey and the Middle East accept Western students willing to commit to long-term study, learn Turkish or Arabic, and embrace the Islamic framework.
Begin with fundamental Islamic literacy if approaching from outside the tradition: understand basic Islamic prayer, Quranic cosmology, and Sufi concepts like nafs (ego-self), qalb (spiritual heart), and the stations of the path. Reading broader Sufi works—such as Ibn Arabi’s writings, Attar’s Conference of the Birds, or Inayat Khan’s mystical teachings—provides helpful context for understanding Mevlevi philosophy within the larger Sufi landscape.