Bektaşi Female Leadership in a Transnational Context: The Spiritual Career of a Contemporary Female Dervish in Germany
Abstract
:Among the women who lived in Rum was one called Kutlu Melek, Fatıma or Kadıncık Ana. One day, in those hopeless times, she had a dream. She saw the sky transformed into a skirt. She was wearing it, and the moon was swallowed by it.
1. Introduction
2. The Legacy of Kadıncık Ana
3. The Spiritual Path of a Contemporary Female Bektaşi Dervish
3.1. Dervish Karabulut, Güllizar Cengiz’s First Spiritual Guide
3.2. Migration to Germany
3.3. Güllizar Cengiz’s Advisors, Teachers, and Her Second Spiritual Guide
3.4. Initiation into the Bektaşi Order as Neriman Aşki Bacı
Neriman Aşki Bacı’s Poetry
Ben gönlümü bir sevdaya kaptırdımİkrar-ı bend oldum bir pire bağlandımÜryan püryan oldum girdim irfanaİkilikten geçtim birliğe bağlandım
Bir kaşı kemana açtım razımıDostun cemaline döndüm yüzümüBir ulu bazara koydum özümüEne’l-Hakk Mansur’u dara bağlandım
Dostun cemaline döndüm yüzümüDarda gözüm açtım pirimi gördümMeyl-ı muhabbette irfana erdimErenler Şahına gönlümü verdim
Beni benden alan ere bağlandımSeyit Nesimi’nin talibi oldumDolular taşırdı boşlara doldumErenler bağında Neriman oldumYandım alev alev kora bağlandım.
I’ve lost my heart to a love,I have made a vow and tied myself to a pir [mürşid],I have become stark naked and entered wisdom,I passed through duality and connected to unity.
I opened my secret to the one whose eyebrow is [as beautiful] as a bow,I turned my face to my friend’s beauty,I put my self [can] in a great bazar,I am tightly bound to Mansur’s Ene’l-Hakk [“I am the Truth/Allah”].
I turned my face to my friend’s beauty,I tied myself to the gallows (dar) [that Hallac-ı Mansur was hanged on] and saw my pir,I have attained wisdom in love,I gave my heart to the Shah of the erenler [Hacı Bektaş-ı Veli].
I am tied to the father who took me from me,I have become the seeker of Seyyid Nesimi,I was filled to overflowing and filled to emptiness,I became Neriman in the vineyard of the erenler,I was burned in flames, I am bound to the embers.(Translation by the author with adaptions by Neriman Aşki Derviş)
Its string is made from the leather of the sacrificial lamb of Ismail. It refers to the skin of Nesimi Sultan. The strap is the gallows rope of Mansur. The upper half [of the stone] symbolizes Hz. Hasan, the lower half symbolizes our Lord Hz. İmam Hüseyin-ı Karbala, and the twelve indentations (in the shape of a crescent moon) represent the twelve Imams. The outer side points to Hatice-tül-Kübra, and the inner side to Fatıma-tüz-Zehra.
3.5. Neriman Aşki Bacı as Muhib
3.6. The Opening of the Kadıncık Ana Dergah in Western Germany
3.7. Becoming Dervish as a Woman: Neriman Aşki Derviş
4. Women Dervishes
The sisters (bacılar) have very important services on the path of the Bektaşi Order. The best example of this is Kadıncık Ana and her services on the path. It seems unlikely that a bacı can become a baba, halifebaba or dedebaba in today’s conditions. But only the elders who have completed the path know what will happen in the future. We see no obstacle for the female muhibs who are serving today to become dervishes. In our opinion, the highest position of service is that of dervish.
We are people of faith. We accept and think about everything that comes from God. The door to marriage is also a service. We do everything for our spouses, our children and to keep the family together. However, if one of the parties in the relationship does not behave according to the rules of the path, we inform our mürşid about the situation and do what is necessary. This case is the same. We live as we have to live. It is our duty to accept everything.(Neriman Aşki Derviş, email to the author on 16 February 2022)
5. Concluding Remarks
Gelincek baş açık Kadıncık anaAdviye Bacı’yım mecburum sanaBirlikte batınan eyledik semahHünkar Hacı Bektaş Horasan eri.
When Kadıncık Ana comes with a bare head,I am Adviye Bacı, I am bound to you,We did semah together in secret,Sovereign Hacı Bektaş, perfect man of Khurasan.(Translation adapted from Zarcone 2010, pp. 70–1)
Erkek dişi sorulmaz muhabbetin dilindeHakk’ın yarattığı her şey yerli yerindeBizim nazarımızda kadın–erkek farkı yokNoksanlık eksiklik senin görüşlerinde.
In the language of divine love, there is no question of male or female,Everything created by God is in its place,There is no difference between men and women in our eyes,The deficiency is in your views.41(Neriman Aşki Derviş, email to the author on 16 February 2022)
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Notes
1 | Unless otherwise indicated, all words in italics are Turkish terms. |
2 | “Unlike sex”, argues David Halperin, “sexuality is a cultural production” (Halperin 1989, p. 257) whereas “gender” is performative (Butler 1990, p. 185), referring to practice and social recognition (cf. Hendrich 2013, pp. 303–4). At the same time, Sara Haq Hussaini (2012) reflects on the conceptual pair of gender and sexuality as in-between states that transcend binaries. |
3 | Videos of the 2020 conference presentations by Güllizar Cengiz, Fawzia Al-Rawi Al-Rifai, H. Nur Artiran, Amina Teslima al-Jerrahi, Cemâlnur Sargut, and Fariha Fatima al-Jerrahi at “Female Visions: The Religious Visual Culture of Contemporary Female Islamic Mysticism” (as part of Sara Kuehn’s project “SufiVisual”) can be found on the conference website. See Female Visions (2020). |
4 | Following Ralph Grillo, in this article “transnationalism” refers to “social, cultural, economic and political relations which are between, above or beyond the nation-state, interconnecting, transcending, perhaps even superseding, what has been for the past two hundred years their primary locus. Specially, within anthropology, transnational used in a migration context refers to people, trans-national migrants (‘transmigrants’) who in the simplest formula ‘live lives across borders’” (Grillo 2004, p. 864) (cf. Spivak 1996, pp. 245–69). |
5 | The study is based on ethnographic research conducted between 2018 and 2021, in both the Cologne and Bonn regions and in Izmir, including interviews with Güllizar Cengiz, combined with an analysis of documentary sources. |
6 | |
7 | Useful contributions from the growing body of research in Alevi studies include Aksünger-Kizil and Kahraman (2018); Weineck and Zimmermann (2018); Issa (2017); Shankland (2003); Dressler (2002); Şahin (2001); Olsson et al. (1998); Vorhoff (1995); Kehl-Bodrogi (1988). |
8 | Common English translations have been used for Sufi terms, such as “saint” (for veli; literally “friend of God”) or, in the following, “miracle of the saints” (for keramet), although the concepts behind these terms are clearly different from the Christian ones. On the concept of holiness in Sufism, see also McGregor (2000, pp. 33–49). |
9 | The full title is Manâkıb-ı Hacı Bektâş-ı Velî (“Legends of Saint Hacı Bektaş”). |
10 | The term “Babagan” is not normally used by the Bektaşis themselves in reference to their tradition. |
11 | Over the course of the twentieth century, the problematic modern term “Alevi-Bektaşi” was often used to reflect a single identity of the two communities. The Bektaşi Sufi order and the Alevi communities are, in the words of Thierry Zarcone, “two syncretic Turkish religious traditions that are close to each other and originate from the same matrix that emerged around the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in Anatolia” (Zarcone 2017, p. 203). The self-designation “Alevi” (historically referred to as Kızılbaş, “redhead”, probably from the wearing of crimson headgear, taç-ı haydari) derives from the Arabic term “‘Alawi”, referring to the descendants and followers of Ali b. Abi Talib. As the term indicates, “Alevi communities are spiritually bound to Imam Ali” (Erol 2012, p. 837; Engin 2016, pp. 145–46). |
12 | İklil Selçuk recently pointed out that it remains difficult to assess the status of these women and how they received their epithets, as well as the extent to which women were systematically involved in ahi activities or in the study of fütüvvet ethics. She also notes that it is possible that the women simply received their titles as daughters or wives of prominent ahis (Selçuk 2017, pp. 96–97). |
13 | Women’s membership in Sufi orders seems to have continued to be an important factor despite their exclusion from higher positions within each order. Interestingly, the 1882 general census revealed that in Istanbul alone, the 260 dervish lodges (Bektaşi and other Sufi orders) had a total of 2375 members, of whom 1184 were women (Ergin 1977, p. 240). |
14 | |
15 | Alevilik developed as an endogamous social group, and thus as a kind of ethnic group in which children of Alevi parents were considered Alevi. However, the initiation into ritual life occurred after marriage through a ceremony in which couples were united in a bond of spiritual siblinghood (musahiplik), in which the husband of one couple was considered the brother of the wife of the other spouse, and vice versa, to ensure the protection of the women in case something happened to their husbands. |
16 | |
17 | |
18 | On İlhami Baba, see Küçük (2002, pp. 270, 375). |
19 | The religious hierarchy of Babagan Bektaşism is as follows: aşık (sympathizers of the order), muhib, derviş, baba, halife (representative) baba, and dedebaba at the top. |
20 | On the Bektaşi initiation ritual, see Soileau (2019); Zarcone (2016, pp. 781–98); Ringgren (1965, pp. 202–8). |
21 | Male initiates are given a white headdress symbolizing purity, known as arakiye (pl. arakiyeler). There is evidence that women also wore white and red arakiyeler in the past (Noyan 1977). Over time, however, the headscarf, which was the customary head covering for women, prevailed. See Menemencioğlu Temren (2010). |
22 | See https://alevibektasikulturenstitusu.de/. Accessed online on 25 February 2023. |
23 | See https://www.abked.de/index.php/abked. Accessed online on 25 February 2023. |
24 | Since the death of Bedri Noyan in 1997, there has been an ongoing dispute in Turkey over the appointment of the dedebaba. |
25 | The question of what kind of specific transnational transformations and adaptations have been made to create an appropriate “spiritual milieu” in which this transplanted Bektaşi community in diaspora can thrive will have to be the subject of a separate investigation. For a general discussion on the engagements of Sufism with modernity in the Western spiritual milieu, see Zarrabi-Zadeh (2019). |
26 | The fact that women participate in Bektaşi ritual ceremonies alongside men has, in the public imagination, often associated the Bektaşi order with the mysterious, the immoral, and the heretical. This is reflected, for example, in the best-selling novel Nur Baba (1921) by the Turkish writer Yakup Kadri Karaosmanoğlu (1889–1974). The novel has been translated widely, including a German translation by Annemarie Schimmel in 1986 and an English translation by M. Brett Wilson in 2023. See Karaosmanoğlu (1921, 1986, 2023). |
27 | A useful insight into Alevi dance is given in the short documentary film Heavenly Journeys—Insights into Alevi Ritual Dance (Klapp 2015). |
28 | For historical and contemporary examples of women leading the cem, see Bahadir (2004, pp. 13–28). Knowledge about women leading the cem does not appear to be widespread though. According to Arslan (2017, p. 4), tradition suggests that there were only one or two cem assemblies that were led by an ana. |
29 | In the past, a female dervish was therefore known as Taçlı Bacı (“crowned sister”). See Menemencioğlu Temren (2010). |
30 | |
31 | For further information on the haydariye, which is also worn by other Sufi orders, see Kuehn (2019, pp. 164–66). |
32 | In early December 2021, four members who had been waiting for years were at last admitted to the dergah as muhibs. |
33 | As Cemal Kafadar notes, Bektaşi women poets do not appear in the written sources before the late eighteenth century, and thus there is also no trace of their position in the Bektaşi hierarchy (Kafadar 1993, p. 194); see Yenisey 1946, but also Ergun’s (1956) anthology, which goes back to the seventeenth century but does not list any women poets from that century. |
34 | For instance, Arife Bacı (b. 1868), who was one of the dervishes of Hafız Baba, the postnişin of the Istanbul Karyağdı Dergah (Keleş 2020, p. 116); Hatice Bacı (d. 1936), one of the dervishes of Ahmet Burhaneddin Baba, postnişin of the Istanbul Merdivenköy Dervish Lodge (Keleş 2020, p. 118); likewise, Naciye Bacı (b. 1872) and her friend Zehra Bacı, both dervishes of the Istanbul Merdivenköy Dervish Lodge (Keleş 2020, p. 131); İkbal Bacı and Şeref Bacı (d. 1908), dervishes of the Çamlıca Bektaşi Tekke (Keleş 2020, pp. 129–30); Arife Bacı (b. 1868), a dervish of Hafız Baba, the postnişin of the Eyüb Karyağdı Dervish Lodge; and Emine Beyza Bacı (d. 1934), a dervish of Abdullah Nur Baba, the postnişin of the Topkapı Bektaşi Lodge (Alvan 2021). |
35 | Mention must be made of the wives of babas, who were also elevated in the religious hierarchy with the title of ana bacı (Menemencioğlu Temren 1998, pp. 128–31), a title associated with the husband’s socio-religious advancement in the order. |
36 | Hıdır Temel (2017, p. 227) has recently questioned whether Anşa Bacı, as a woman, could have actually led the cem, or whether one of her three sons did not lead the ritual. That Anşa Bacı’s example would not have been such an exception has been shown by İbrahim Bahadir, who lists examples of female cem leaders (Bahadir 2004, pp. 13–28). |
37 | As Neriman Aşki Derviş explains, Baba Mondi is not recognized by the Bektaşis in Turkey because, according to the canon (erkan) of the Babagan Bektaşi, a baba must renew his vows annually with the officiating dedebaba in Turkey, as Baba Mondi’s predecessor Reshat Bardhi (d. 2011) did. Baba Mondi reportedly did not renew his vows, so his claim to the office of dedebaba is not recognized by the Babagan Bektaşis (Neriman Aşki Derviş, interview with the author on 23 March 2019). |
38 | On the complexities of the terminology of such ranks held by women in the Bektaşi and Alevi contexts, see Hendrich (2013, pp. 311–12). |
39 | It is interesting to note that, while cyberspace has been instrumental in transforming most international Sufi orders into transnational phenomena, this is not the case with the Bektaşis. “Traditional” means of contact, such as the telephone, are still common forms of communication. Audio-visual media, multimedia representations of ritual practices led by a Sufi şeyh, as practiced by other transnational Sufi movements, are incompatible with the Bektaşi practice of conducting their ritual activities discreetly. According to John Kingsley Birge, the “Bektaşi secret” includes political, ritual, moral, and social teachings known and transmitted only by the Bektaşis (Birge 1937, pp. 159–61). |
40 | Significantly, Kadıncık Ana’s türbe is said to be in the Çilehane, a cell for ascetic retreat (çile). For ritual activities at the Kadıncık Ana Evi, see Hendrich (2005, p. 240). |
41 | This is reiterated by Edip Harabi (d. 1917), one of the greatest Bektaşi poets of the last century, who reminds us, for example, that men and women, though different, are both creatures and servants of God: “Is it not the Praised One who created us? Is not the female lion a lion?” See Zarcone (2010, p. 107). |
42 | In fact, most of the babas in Turkey today are married (cf. Küçük 2002, p. 375). |
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Kuehn, S. Bektaşi Female Leadership in a Transnational Context: The Spiritual Career of a Contemporary Female Dervish in Germany. Religions 2023, 14, 970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080970
Kuehn S. Bektaşi Female Leadership in a Transnational Context: The Spiritual Career of a Contemporary Female Dervish in Germany. Religions. 2023; 14(8):970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080970
Chicago/Turabian StyleKuehn, Sara. 2023. "Bektaşi Female Leadership in a Transnational Context: The Spiritual Career of a Contemporary Female Dervish in Germany" Religions 14, no. 8: 970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080970
APA StyleKuehn, S. (2023). Bektaşi Female Leadership in a Transnational Context: The Spiritual Career of a Contemporary Female Dervish in Germany. Religions, 14(8), 970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14080970