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Dervish

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Image:Preziosi - Derviş cerşetor.jpg

Image:Darvish bazaar.jpg
A Persian dervish, Qajar era, seen here from an 1873 depiction of Tehran's Grand Bazaar.

The word Dervish, especially in European languages, refers to members of Sufi Muslim ascetic religious fraternities, known for their extreme poverty and austerity, similar to mendicant friars.

The term comes from the Persian word Darwīsh (درویش), which usually refers to a mendicant ascetic. This latter word is also used to refer to an unflappable or ascetic temperament (as in the Urdu phrase darwaishana thabiyath for an ascetic temperament); that is, for an attitude that is indifferent to material possessions and the like.

As Sufi practitioners, dervishes were known as a source of wisdom, medicine, poetry, enlightment, and witticisms. For example, Mollah Nasr-ad-Din (Mulla Nasrudin, Hoja Nasrudin) had become a legend in the Near East and the Indian subcontinent, not only among the Muslims.

[edit] Religious practice

Many of the dervishes are mendicant ascetics who have taken the vow of poverty. Though some of them are beggars by choice (dervishes are prohibited to beg unless they cannot provide for themselves), others work in common professions; Egyptian Qadiriyya – known in Turkey as Kadiri – for example, are fishermen. Rifa'iyyah dervishes traveled and spread into North and East Africa, Turkey, Balkans and as far as Bosnia and India.

There are also various dervish fraternities (Sufi orders), almost all of whom trace their origins from various Muslim saints and teachers, especially Ali and Abu Bakr. They live in monastic conditions, superficially similar to Christian monk fraternities. Various orders and suborders have appeared and disappeared over the centuries.

Whirling dance, which is the practice of the Mevlevi Order in Turkey, is just one of the physical methods to try to reach religious ecstasy (majdhb, fana). Mevlevi comes from a Persian poet whose shrine is in Turkey and who was a Dervish himself.

Other groups include the Bektashis, connected to the janissaries, and Senussi, who are rather orthodox in their beliefs. Other fraternities and subgroups chant verses of the Qur'an, play drums or dance vigorously in groups, all according to their specific traditions. Some practice quiet meditation, as is the case with most of the Sufi orders in South Asia, many of whom owe allegiance to, or were influenced by, the Chishti order. Each fraternity uses its own garb and methods of acceptance and initiation, some of them which may be rather severe.

Whirling dervish dances have also become a tourist attraction, particularly in Turkey (home of the Mevlevi order), and some are organized solely for that purpose.

[edit] Historical and political use

Note that various historical western writers have sometimes used the term dervish rather loosely, linking it to, among other things, Mahdist uprising in Sudan and other rebellions against colonial powers.

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