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Alevism

Alevism, Anatolian Alevism or Qizilbashism[10] (/æˈlɛvɪzəm/; Turkish: Alevilik, Anadolu Aleviliği or Kızılbaşlık; Kurdish: Elewîtî, Rêya Heqî;[11][12][13] Azerbaijani: Ələvilik, Qızılbaşlıq) is a heterodox[14] and syncretic[15] Islamic tradition, whose adherents follow the mystical Islamic teachings of Haji Bektash Veli, who is supposed to have taught the teachings of the Twelve Imams whilst incorporating some traditions from Turkish Shamanism.[16] Differing from Sunni Islam and Usuli Twelver Shia Islam, Alevis have no binding religious dogmas, and teachings are passed on by a spiritual leader as with Sufi orders.[17] They acknowledge the six articles of faith of Islam, but may differ regarding their interpretation.[9]

Alevism
Alevilik
ScriptureQuran, Nahj al-Balagha, Makalat and Buyruks
LeaderDede
Teachings of[8]
TheologyHaqq–Muhammad–Ali
RegionTurkey
LanguageTurkish, Albanian, Azerbaijani, Kurdish, and Zazaki[9]
LiturgyCem, Sema
HeadquartersHaji Bektash Veli Complex, Nevşehir, Turkey
FounderHaji Bektash Veli
Origin13th-century
Sulucakarahöyük
Separated fromSunni and Usuli Twelver theology
Other name(s)Kızılbaşlık
Haji Bektash Veli Complex

Originally one of many Sufi approaches within Sunni Islam; by the 16th century the order adopted some tenets of the Shia Islam, including a veneration of ʿAlī and the twelve imams, as well as a variety of syncretic beliefs. The Alevis acquired political importance in the 15th century, when the order dominated the Janissaries.[18]

The term “Alevi-Bektashi” is currently a widely and frequently used expression in the religious discourse of Turkey as an umbrella term for the two religious groups of Alevism and Bektashism.[19] Adherents of Alevism are found primarily in Turkey and estimates of the percentage of Turkey's population that are Alevi include between 4% and 25%.[9][20][21]

Etymology edit

"Alevi" (/æˈlɛvi/) is generally explained as referring to Ali, the cousin and son-in-law of Muhammad. The name represents a Turkish form of the word ʻAlawiyy (Arabic: علوي) "of or pertaining to Ali".

A minority viewpoint is that of the Ishikists, who assert, "Alevi" was derived from "Alev" ("flame" in Turkish) in reference to fire which is extensively used in Alevi rituals. According to them the use of candles is based on Quran, surah an-Nur, verses 35–36:

God is the Light of the heavens and the earth. The example of His light is like a niche within which there is a lamp, the lamp is encased in a glass, the glass is like a radiant planet, which is lit from a blessed olive tree that is neither of the east nor of the west, its oil nearly gives off light even if not touched by fire. Light upon light, God guides to His light whom He pleases. And God sets forth examples for the people, and God is aware of all things. (Lit is such a Light) in houses, which God has permitted to be raised to honor; for the celebration, in them, of His name: In them is He glorified in the mornings and in the evenings, (again and again).

Beliefs edit

According to scholar Soner Çağaptay, Alevism is a "relatively unstructured interpretation of Islam".[22] Journalist Patrick Kingsley states that for some self-described Alevi, their religion is "simply a cultural identity, rather than a form of worship".[14]

Many teachings are based on an orally transmitted tradition, traditionally kept secret from outsiders (but now widely accessible). Alevis commonly profess the Islamic shahada, but adding "Ali is the friend of God".

The basis for Alevis' most distinctive beliefs is found in the Buyruks (compiled writings and dialogues of Sheikh Safi-ad-din Ardabili, and other worthies). Also included are hymns (nefes) by figures such as Shah Ismail or Pir Sultan Abdal, stories of Hajji Bektash and other lore.

The Alevi beliefs among Turkish Alevis and Kurdish Alevis diverge as Kurdish Alevis put more emphasis on Pir Sultan Abdal than Haji Bektash Veli, and Kurdish Alevism is rooted more in nature veneration.[23][24]

God edit

In Alevi cosmology, God is also called Al-Haqq (the Truth)[25] or referred to as Allah. God created life, so the created world can reflect His Being.[26] Alevis believe in the unity of Allah, Muhammad, and Ali, but this is not a trinity composed of God and the historical figures of Muhammad and Ali. Rather, Muhammad and Ali are representations of Allah's light (and not of Allah himself), being neither independent from God, nor separate characteristics of Him.[25]

In Alevi writings are many references to the unity of Muhammad and Ali, such as:

 
A representation of the sword of Ali, the Zulfiqar in an Ottoman emblem

Ali Muhammed'dir uh dur fah'ad, Muhammad Ali, ("Ali is Muhammad, Muhammad is Ali") Gördüm bir elmadır, el-Hamdû'liLlâh. ("I've seen an apple, all praise is for God")[27]

The phrase "For the love of Haqq–Muhammad–Ali" (Hakk–Muhammad–Ali aşkına) is common to several Alevi prayers.

Spirits and afterlife edit

Alevis believe in the immortality of the soul,[25] the literal existence of supernatural beings, including good angels (melekler) and bad angels (şeytanlar),[28] bad ones as encourager of human's evil desires (nefs), and jinn (cinler), as well as the evil eye.[29]

Angels feature in Alevi cosmogony. Although there is no fixed creation narrative among Alevis, it is generally accepted that God created five archangels, who have been invited to the chamber of God. Inside they found a light representing the light of Muhammad and Ali. A recount of the Quranic story, one of the archangels refused to prostrate before the light, arguing, that the light is a created body just like him and therefore inappropriate to worship. He remains at God's service, but rejects the final test and turns back to darkness. From this primordial decline, the devil's enmity towards Adam emerged. (The archangels constitute of the same four archangels as within orthodox Islam. The fifth archangel namely Azazil fell from grace, thus not included among the canonical archangels apart from this story).[30]

Another story features the archangel Gabriel (Cebrail), who is asked by God, who they are. Gabriel answers: "I am I and you are you". Gabriel gets punished for his haughty answer and is sent away, until Ali reveals a secret to him. When God asks him again, he answers: "You are the creator and I am your creation". Afterwards, Gabriel was accepted and introduced to Muhammad and Ali.[30]

Scriptures and prophets edit

Alevis acknowledge the four revealed scriptures also recognized in Islam: the Tawrat (Torah), the Zabur (Psalms), the Injil (Gospel), and the Quran.[31] Additionally, Alevis are not opposed to looking to other religious books outside the four major ones as sources for their beliefs including Hadiths, Nahjul Balagha and Buyruks. Alevism also acknowledges the Islamic prophet Mohammed. Unlike the vast majority of Muslims, Alevis do not regard interpretations of the Quran today as binding or infallible, since the true meaning the Quran is considered to be taken as a secret by Ali and must be taught by a teacher, who transmits the teachings of Ali (Buyruk) to his disciple.[32]

Twelve Imams edit

The Twelve Imams are part of another common Alevi belief. Each Imam represents a different aspect of the world. They are realized as twelve services or On İki Hizmet which are performed by members of the Alevi community. Each Imam is believed to be a reflection of Ali ibn Abu Talib, the first Imam of the Shi'ites, and there are references to the "First Ali" (Birinci Ali), Imam Hasan the "Second 'Ali" (İkinci Ali), and so on up to the "Twelfth 'Ali" (Onikinci Ali), Imam Mehdi. The Twelfth Imam is hidden and represents the Messianic Age.

Plurality edit

The plurality in nature is attributed to the infinite potential energy of Kull-i Nafs when it takes corporeal form as it descends into being from Allah. During the Cem ceremony, the cantor or aşık sings:

"All of us alive or lifeless are from one, this is ineffable, Sultan.
For to love and to fall in love has been my fate from time immemorial."

This is sung as a reminder that the reason for creation is love, so that the followers may know themselves and each other and that they may love that which they know.

Perfect human being edit

 
A statue of Yunus Emre, who codified the theory of 'Insan-i Kamil'.[33]

Linked to the concept of the Prototypical Human is that of the al-Insān al-Kāmil "Perfect Human Being". Although it is common to refer to Ali and Haji Bektash Veli or the other Alevi saints as manifestations of the perfect human being, the Perfect Human Being is also identified with our true identity as pure consciousness, hence the Qur'anic concept of human beings not having original sin, consciousness being pure and perfect. [citation needed] The human task is to fully realize this state while still in material human form.

The perfect human being is also defined in practical terms, as one who is in full moral control of his or her hands, tongue and loins (eline diline beline sahip); treats all kinds of people equally (yetmiş iki millete aynı gözle bakar); and serves the interests of others. One who has achieved this kind of enlightenment is also called eren or münevver "enlightened".[citation needed]

Creed and jurisprudence edit

 
Tomb of Ahi Evren; founder and leader of the Ahi Brotherhood, which evolved into a Beylik later on.[34]

Sources differ on how important formal doctrine is among contemporary Alevi. According to scholar Russell Powell, there is a tradition of informal "Dede" courts within the Alevi society, but regarding Islamic jurisprudence or fiqh there has been "little scholarship on Alevi influences" in it.[35]

  • "The Alevi-Turks" has a unique belief system tracing back to Kaysanites and Khurramites, which are considered ghulat Shi'ism. According to Turkish scholar Abdülbaki Gölpinarli, the Qizilbash "Red Heads" of the 16th century, a religious and political movement in Azerbaijan that helped to establish the Safavid dynasty, were spiritual descendants of the Khurramites.[36]
  • Among the members of the Qizilbash order, who are a subsect of the Alevis, Abu Muslim (who assisted Abbasid Caliphate to beat the Umayyad Caliphate, but who was later eliminated and murdered by Caliph al-Mansur) and Babak Khorramdin (who incited a rebellion against Abbasid Caliphate and consequently was killed by Caliph al-Mu'tasim) are highly respected. This belief provides strong clues about Kaysanite and Khurramite origins. In addition, Safavid order leader Ismail I is a highly regarded individual in Alevism associating them with the theology of Twelver Shia Islam.[citation needed]

Practices edit

The Alevi spiritual path (yol) is commonly understood to take place through four major life-stages, or "gates". These may be further subdivided into "four gates, forty levels" (Dört Kapı Kırk Makam). The first gate (religious law) is considered elementary (and this may be perceived as subtle criticism of other Muslim traditions).

The following are major crimes that cause an Alevi to be declared düşkün (shunned):[37]

  • killing a person
  • committing adultery
  • divorcing one's wife without a just reason
  • stealing
  • backbiting/gossiping

Most Alevi activity takes place in the context of the second gate (spiritual brotherhood), during which one submits to a living spiritual guide (dede, pir, mürşid). The existence of the third and fourth gates is mostly theoretical, though some older Alevis have apparently received initiation into the third.[38]

Rakia, a fruit brandy, is used as a sacramental element by the Bektashi Order,[39] and Alevi Jem ceremonies, where it is not considered alcoholic and is referred to as "dem".[40]

Dede edit

A Dede (literally meaning grandfather) is a traditional leader that is claimed to be from the lineage of Muhammad that performs ritual baptisms for newborns, officiates at funerals, and organises weekly gatherings at cemevis.[41]

Cem and Cemevi edit

 
People performing Cem
 
Bağlama

Alevi religious, cultural and other social activities take place in assembly houses (Cemevi). The ceremony's prototype is the Muhammad's nocturnal ascent into heaven, where he beheld a gathering of forty saints (Kırklar Meclisi), and the Divine Reality made manifest in their leader, Ali.

The Cem ceremony features music, singing, and dancing (Samāh) in which both women and men participate. Rituals are performed in Turkish, Zazaki, Kurmanji and other local languages.

Bağlama

During the Cem ceremony the Âşık plays the Bağlama whilst singing spiritual songs, some of which are centuries old and well known amongst Alevis. Every song, called a Nefes, has spiritual meaning and aims to teach the participants important lessons.

Samāh

A family of ritual dances characterized by turning and swirling, is an inseparable part of any cem. Samāh is performed by men and women together, to the accompaniment of the Bağlama. The dances symbolize (for example) the revolution of the planets around the Sun (by man and woman turning in circles), and the putting off of one's self and uniting with God.

Görgü Cemi

The Rite of Integration (görgü cemi) is a complex ritual occasion in which a variety of tasks are allotted to incumbents bound together by extrafamilial brotherhood (müsahiplik), who undertake a dramatization of unity and integration under the direction of the spiritual leader (dede).

Dem

The love of the creator for the created and vice versa is symbolised in the Cem ceremony by the use of fruit juice and/or red wine[citation needed] [Dem] which represents the intoxication of the lover in the beloved. During the ceremony Dem is one of the twelve duties of the participants. (see above)

Sohbet

At the closing of the cem ceremony the Dede who leads the ceremony engages the participants in a discussion (chat), this discussion is called a sohbet.

Twelve services edit

There are twelve services (Turkish: On İki hizmet) performed by the twelve ministers of the cem.

  1. Dede: This is the leader of the Cem who represents Muhammad and Ali. The Dede receives confession from the attendees at the beginning of the ceremony. He also leads funerals, Müsahiplik, marriage ceremonies and circumcisions. The status of Dede is hereditary and he must be a descendant of Ali and Fatima.
  2. Rehber: This position represents Husayn. The Rehber is a guide to the faithful and works closely with the Dede in the community.
  3. Gözcü: This position represents Abu Dharr al-Ghifari. S/he is the assistant to the Rehber. S/he is the Cem keeper responsible for keeping the faithful calm.
  4. Çerağcı: This position represents Jabir ibn Abd-Allah and s/he is the light-keeper responsible for maintaining the light traditionally given by a lamp or candles.
  5. Zakir: This position represents Bilal ibn al-Harith. S/he plays the bağlama and recites songs and prayers.
  6. Süpürgeci: This position represents Salman the Persian. S/he is responsible for cleaning the Cemevi hall and symbolically sweeping the carpets during the Cem.
  7. Meydancı: This position represents Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman.
  8. Niyazcı: this position represents Muhammad ibn Maslamah. S/he is responsible for distributing the sacred meal.
  9. İbrikçi: this position represents Kamber. S/he is responsible for washing the hands of the attendees.
  10. Kapıcı: this position represents Ghulam Kaysan. S/he is responsible for calling the faithful to the Cem.
  11. Peyikçi: this position represents Amri Ayyari.
  12. Sakacı: represents Ammar ibn Yasir. Responsible for the distribution of water, sherbet (sharbat), milk etc..

Festivals edit

 
10th of Muharrem – The Day of Ashura: Huseyn bin Ali was murdered at Kerbela. Mourning of Muharram and the remembrance of this event by Jafaris, Alevis and Bektashis together in Ottoman Empire. Painted by Fausto Zonaro.

Alevis celebrate and commemorate the birth of Ali, his wedding with Fatima, the rescue of Yusuf from the well, and the creation of the world on this day. Various cem ceremonies and special programs are held.

Mourning of Muharram edit

The Muslim month of Muharram begins 20 days after Eid ul-Adha (Kurban Bayramı). Alevis observe a fast for the first twelve days, known as the Mourning of Muharram (Turkish: Muharrem Mâtemi, Yâs-ı Muharrem, or Mâtem Orucu; Kurdish: Rojîya Şînê or Rojîya Miherremê). This culminates in the festival of Ashura (Aşure), which commemorates the martyrdom of Husayn at Karbala. The fast is broken with a special dish (also called aşure) prepared from a variety (often twelve) of fruits, nuts, and grains. Many events are associated with this celebration, including the salvation of Husayn's son Ali ibn Husayn from the massacre at Karbala, thus allowing the bloodline of the family of Muhammad to continue.

Hıdırellez edit

 
A Persian miniature depicting Elijah and al-Khiḍr (A miniature version of Stories of the Prophets)

Hıdırellez honors the mysterious figure Khidr (Turkish: Hızır) who is sometimes identified with Elijah (Ilyas), and is said to have drunk of the water of life. Some hold that Khidr comes to the rescue of those in distress on land, while Elijah helps those at sea; and that they meet at a rose tree in the evening of every 6 May. The festival is also celebrated in parts of the Balkans by the name of "Erdelez," where it falls on the same day as George's Day in Spring or Saint George's Day.

Khidr is also honored with a three-day fast in mid-February called Hızır Orucu. In addition to avoiding any sort of comfort or enjoyment, Alevis also abstain from food and water for the entire day, though they do drink liquids other than water during the evening.

Note that the dates of the Khidr holidays can differ among Alevis, most of whom use a lunar calendar, but some a solar calendar.

Müsahiplik edit

Müsahiplik (roughly, "Companionship") is a covenant relationship between two men of the same age, preferably along with their wives. In a ceremony in the presence of a dede the partners make a lifelong commitment to care for the spiritual, emotional, and physical needs of each other and their children. The ties between couples who have made this commitment is at least as strong as it is for blood relatives, so much so that müsahiplik is often called spiritual brotherhood (manevi kardeşlik). The children of covenanted couples may not marry.[42]

Krisztina Kehl-Bodrogi reports that the Tahtacı identify müsahiplik with the first gate (şeriat), since they regard it as a precondition for the second (tarikat). Those who attain to the third gate (marifat, "gnosis") must have been in a müsahiplik relationship for at least twelve years. Entry into the third gate dissolves the müsahiplik relationship (which otherwise persists unto death), in a ceremony called Öz Verme Âyini ("ceremony of giving up the self").

The value corresponding to the second gate (and necessary to enter the third) is âşinalık ("intimacy," perhaps with God). Its counterpart for the third gate is called peşinelik; for the fourth gate (hâkikat, Ultimate Truth), cıngıldaşlık or cengildeşlik (translations uncertain).[43]

Folk practices edit

 
 
It is a common Alevi-Sunni tradition to distribute lokma (top) and ashure (below) publicly in Turkey.

Many folk practices may be identified, though few of them are specific to the Alevis. In this connection, scholar Martin van Bruinessen notes a sign from Turkey's Ministry of Religion, attached to Istanbul's shrine of Eyüp Sultan, which presents

...a long list of ‘superstitious’ practices that are emphatically declared to be non-Islamic and objectionable, such as lighting candles or placing ‘wishing stones’ on the tomb, tying pieces of cloth to the shrine or to the trees in front of it, throwing money on the tomb, asking the dead directly for help, circling seven times around the trees in the courtyard or pressing one’s face against the walls of the türbe in the hope of a supernatural cure, tying beads to the shrine and expecting supernatural support from them, sacrificing roosters or turkeys as a vow to the shrine. The list is probably an inventory of common local practices the authorities wish to prevent from re-emerging.[44]

Other, similar practices include kissing door frames of holy rooms; not stepping on the threshold of holy buildings; seeking prayers from reputed healers; and making lokma and sharing it with others. Also, Ashure is made and shared with friends and family during the month of Muharram in which the Day of Ashure takes place.[45]

Ziyarat to sacred places edit

 
Entrance of Karacaahmet Cemetery in Istanbul, Turkey

Performing ziyarat and du'a at the tombs of Alevi-Bektashi saints or pirs is quite common. Some of the most frequently visited sites are the shrines of Şahkulu and Karacaahmet (both in Istanbul), Abdal Musa (Antalya), Seyyid Battal Gazi Complex (Eskişehir), Hamza Baba (İzmir), Hasandede (Kırıkkale).[46]

In contrast with the traditional secrecy of the Cem ceremony ritual, the events at these cultural centers and sites are open to the public. In the case of the Hacibektaş celebration, since 1990 the activities there have been taken over by Turkey's Ministry of Culture in the interest of promoting tourism and Turkish patriotism rather than Alevi spirituality. The annual celebrations held at Hacıbektaş (16 August) and Sivas (the Pir Sultan Abdal Kültür Etkinlikleri, 23–24 June).

Some Alevis make pilgrimages to mountains and other natural sites believed to be imbued with holiness.

Almsgiving edit

Alevis are expected to give zakat, but there is no set formula or prescribed amount for annual charitable donation as there is in other forms of Islam (2.5% of possessions above a certain minimum). Rather, they are expected to give the "excess" according to Qur'an 2:219. A common method of Alevi almsgiving is through donating food (especially sacrificial animals) to be shared with worshippers and guests. Alevis also donate money to be used to help the poor, to support the religious, educational and cultural activities of Alevi centers and organizations (dargahs, awqaf, and meetings), and to provide scholarships for students.

History edit

 
Ottoman miniature of the founder of the Bektashiyyah Sufi order Hacı Bektaş-ı Veli (Ḥājjī Baktāsh Walī), a murid of Malāmatī-Qalāndārī Sheikh Qutb ad-Dīn Haydar, who introduced the Ahmad Yasavi's doctrine of "Four Doors and Forty Stending" into his tariqah

Seljuk period edit

During the great Turkish expansion from Central Asia into Iran and Anatolia in the Seljuk period (11–12th centuries), Turkmen and Kurdish nomad tribes accepted a Sufi and pro-Ali form of Islam that co-existed with some of their pre-Islamic customs. Their conversion to Islam in this period was achieved largely through the efforts not of textual scholars (ulema) expounding the finer points of Koranic exegesis and shari‘a law, but by charismatic Sufi dervishes a belief whose cult of Muslim saint worship, mystical divination and millenarianism spoke more directly to the steppe mindset. These tribes dominated Anatolia for centuries with their religious warriors (ghazi) spearheading the drive against Byzantines and Crusaders.[47][page needed][verification needed]

Ottoman period edit

As in Khorasan and West Asia before, the Turkmens who spearheaded the Ottomans’ drive into the Balkans and West Asia were more inspired by a vaguely Shiite folk Islam than by formal religion. Many times, Ottoman campaigns were accompanied or guided by Bektaşi dervishes, spiritual heirs of the 13th century Sufi saint Haji Bektash Veli, himself a native of Khorasan. After the conquest of Constantinople in 1453, the Ottoman state became increasingly determined to assert its fiscal but also its juridical and political control over the farthest reaches of the Empire.[47]

The resulting Qizilbash revolts, a series of millenarian anti-state uprisings by the heterodox Turkmen population of Anatolia that culminated in the establishment of a militantly Shiite rival state in neighbouring Iran.[47] The Ottoman Empire later proclaimed themselves its defenders against the Safavid Shia state and related sects. This created a gap between the Sunni Ottoman ruling elite and the Alevi Anatolian population. Anatolia became a battlefield between Safavids and Ottomans, each determined to include it in their empire.

Republic of Turkey edit

According to Eren Sarı, Alevi saw Kemal Atatürk as a Mahdi "savior sent to save them from the Sunni Ottoman yoke".[48] However, pogroms against Alevi did not cease after the establishment of Atatürk's republic. In attacks against leftists in the 1970s, ultranationalists and reactionaries killed many Alevis. Malatya in 1978, Maraş in 1979, and Çorum in 1980 witnessed the murder of hundreds of Alevis, the torching of hundreds of homes, and lootings.[49][50]

Alevis have been victims of pogroms during both Ottoman times and under the Turkish republic up until the 1993 Sivas massacre.[14][49][50]

Organization edit

 
Ali (right) and Husayn ibn Ali (left) medallions in the Hagia Sophia
 
Hasan ibn Ali medallion in Hagia Sophia

In contrast to the Bektashi order – tariqa, which like other Sufi orders is based on a silsila "initiatory chain or lineage" of teachers and their students, Alevi leaders succeed to their role on the basis of family descent. Perhaps ten percent of Alevis belong to a religious elite called ocak "hearth", indicating descent from Ali and/or various other saints and heroes. Ocak members are called ocakzades or "sons of the hearth". This system apparently originated in the Safavid state.

Alevi leaders are variously called murshid, pir, rehber or dede. Groups that conceive of these as ranks of a hierarchy (as in the Bektashi Order) disagree as to the order. The last of these, dede "grandfather", is the term preferred by the scholarly literature. Ocakzades may attain to the position of dede on the basis of selection (by a father from among several sons), character, and learning. In contrast to Alevi rhetoric on the equality of the sexes, it is generally assumed that only males may fill such leadership roles.

Traditionally, dedes did not merely lead rituals, but led their communities, often in conjunction with local notables such as the ağas (large landowners) of the Dersim Region. They also acted as judges or arbiters, presiding over village courts called Düşkünlük Meydanı.

Ordinary Alevi would owe allegiance to a particular dede lineage (but not others) on the basis of pre-existing family or village relations. Some fall instead under the authority of Bektashi dargahs.

In the wake of 20th century urbanization (which removed young laborers from the villages) and socialist influence (which looked upon the dedes with suspicion), the old hierarchy has largely broken down. Many dedes now receive salaries from Alevi cultural centers, which arguably subordinates their role. Such centers no longer feature community business or deliberation, such as the old ritual of reconciliation, but emphasize musical and dance performance to the exclusion of these.[51] Dedes are now approached on a voluntary basis, and their role has become more circumscribed – limited to religious rituals, research, and giving advice.

According to John Shindeldecker "Alevis are proud to point out that they are monogamous, Alevi women are encouraged to get the best education they can, and Alevi women are free to go into any occupation they choose."[52]

Relationship with Shia Islam edit

Alevis are classified as a sect of Shia Islam,[53] and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini decreed Alevis to be part of the Shia fold in the 1970s.[54] However, Alevi philosophies, customs, and rituals are appreciably different from those of mainstream, orthodox Usulis. According to Alevis[which?], Ali and Muhammad are likened to the two sides of a coin, or the two halves of an apple.[citation needed]

Relationship with Alawites edit

Similarities with the Alawites of Syria exist.[citation needed] Both are viewed as heterodox[citation needed], syncretic Islamic minorities, whose names both mean "devoted to Ali," (the son-in-law and cousin of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad, and fourth caliph following Muhammad as leader of the Muslims), and are located primarily in the Eastern Mediterranean. Like mainstream Shia they are known as "Twelvers" as they both recognize the Twelve Imams.

How the two minorities relate is disputed. According to scholar Marianne Aringberg-Laanatza, "the Turkish Alevis... do not relate themselves in any way to the Alawites in Syria."[55] However journalist Jeffrey Gettlemand claims that both Alevi and the less than one million Alawite minority in Turkey "seem to be solidly behind Syria’s embattled strongman, Bashar al-Assad" and leery of Syrian Sunni rebels.[56] Deutsche Welle journalist Dorian Jones states that Turkish Alevis are suspicious of the anti-Assad uprising in Syria. "They are worried of the repercussions for Alawites there, as well as for themselves."[57]

Some sources (Martin van Bruinessen and Jamal Shah) mistake Alawites living in Turkey to be Alevis (calling Alevis "a blanket term for a large number of different heterodox communities"),[58] but others do not, giving a list of the differences between the two groups. These include their liturgical languages (Turkish or Kurdish for Alevi, Arabic for Alawites). Opposing political nationalism, with Alawites supporting their ruling dictatorship and considering Turks (including Alevis) an "opponent" of its Arab "historic interests".[citation needed] (Even Kurdish and Balkan Alevi populations pray in Turkish.)[22]

Unlike Alevis, Alawites not only traditionally lack mosques but do not maintain their own places for worship, except for shrines to their leaders.[citation needed] Alevi "possess an extensive and widely-read religious literature, mainly composed of spiritual songs, poems, and epic verse." Their origins are also different: The Alawite faith was founded in the ninth century by Abu Shuayb Muhammad ibn Nusayr. Alevism started in the 14th century by mystical Islamic dissenters in Central Asia, and represent more of a movement rather than a sect.

Relationship with Sunnis edit

The relationship between Alevis and Sunnis is one of mutual suspicion and prejudice dating back to the Ottoman period. Hundreds of Alevis were murdered in sectarian violence in the years that preceded the 1980 coup, and as late as the 1990s dozens were killed with impunity.[14] While pogroms have not occurred since then, Erdogan has declared "a cemevi is not a place of worship, it is a center for cultural activities. Muslims should only have one place of worship."[14]

Alevis[which?] claim that they have been subject to intolerant Sunni "nationalism" that has been unwilling to recognize Alevi "uniqueness".[59]

Demographics edit

 
Distribution of Alevi population in Turkey. Red = Anatolian Alevis (Turks and Kurds). Dark red = Alawites (Arabs) in Southern Turkey.
 
Alevis in a demonstration in Hamburg

Most Alevi live in Turkey, where they are a minority and Sunni Muslims the majority. The size of the Alevi population is likewise disputed, but most estimates place them somewhere between 5 and 10 million people or about 10% of the population.[60][61] Estimates of the percentage of Turkey's population that are Alevi range between 4% and 15%.[9][20] Scattered minorities live in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Cyprus, Greece, Iran and the diaspora such as Germany and France.[62] In the 2021 United Kingdom census, Alevism was discovered to be the eighth largest religion in England and Wales, after Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Sikhism, Buddhism, Judaism and Paganism.[63]

Different estimations exist on the ethnic composition of the Alevi population. Although Turks are probably the largest ethnic group among Alevis considering their historical towns and cities.[citation needed] While Dressler stated in 2008 that about a third of the Alevi population is Kurdish,[24] Hamza Aksüt argued that the majority is Kurdish[64] when all groups he considers as Alevis, such as the Yarsanis,[65] are counted.[66]

Most Alevis are probably of Kizilbash or Bektashi origin.[9] The Alevis (Kizilbash) are traditionally predominantly rural and acquire identity by parentage. Bektashis, however, are predominantly urban, and formally claim that membership is open to any Muslim. The groups are separately organized, but subscribe to "virtually the same system of beliefs".[9]

Population estimates edit

The Alevi population has been estimated as follows:

  • Approximately 20 million according to Daily Sabah, a newspaper close to the government in 2021.[67]
  • 12,521,000 according to Sabahat Akkiraz, an MP from CHP.[68]
  • "approx. 15 million..." – Krisztina Kehl-Bodrogi.[69]
  • 4% of total population of Turkey – KONDA Research (2021).[20]
  • In Turkey, 15% of Turkey's population (approx. 10.6 million) – Shankland (2006).[70]
  • 20 to 25 million according to Minority Rights Group.[9]
  • There is a native 3,000 Alevi community in Western Thrace, Greece.[71]

Social groups edit

 
Calligraphic hat in Alevi-Bektashism

A Turkish scholar working in France has distinguished four main groups among contemporary Alevis in Turkey.[81]

The first group, who form a majority of the Alevi population, regard themselves as true Muslims and are prepared to cooperate with the state. It adheres to the way of Jafar as-Sadiq, the Sixth Imam of Shia Islam. This group's concept of God is the same as Orthodox Islam, and like their Shia counterparts they reject the first three chosen Caliphs, whom Sunni accept as legitimate, and accept only Ali as the actual and true Caliph.[81]

The second group, which has the second most following among Alevis, are said to be under the active influence of the official Iranian Shia and to be confirmed adherents of the Twelver branch of Shia Islam and they reject the teachings of Bektashism Tariqa. They follow the Ja'fari jurisprudence and oppose secular state power.[81]

The third group, a minority belief held by the Alevis, is mainly represented by people who belong to the political left and presumed the Aleviness just as an outlook on the individual human life rather than a religious conviction by persistently renouncing the ties of Alevism with Twelver political branch of Shia Islam. The followers of this congregation, who later turned out to be the very stern defenders of Erdoğan Çınar, hold ritual unions of a religious character and have established cultural associations named after Pir Sultan Abdal as well. According to their philosophy, human being should enjoy a central role reminiscent of the doctrine of Khurramites, and as illustrated by Hurufi phrase of God is Man quoted above in the context of the Trinity.[81]

The fourth[citation needed] who adopted some aspirations of Christian mysticism, is more directed towards heterodox mysticism and stands closer to the Hajji Bektashi Brotherhood. According to the philosophy developed by this congregation, Christian mystic St Francis of Assisi and Hindu Mahatma Gandhi are supposedly considered better believers of God than many Muslims.[81]

Influences of other beliefs and sects on Alevism edit

 
Four Spiritual Stations in Bektashiyyah: Sharia, tariqa, haqiqa, and the fourth station, marifa, which is considered "unseen", is actually the center of the haqiqa region. Marifa is the essence of all four stations.

Sufi elements in Alevism edit

Despite this essentially Shi‘i orientation, much of Aleviness' mystical language is inspired by Sufi traditions. For example, the Alevi concept of God is derived from the philosophy of Ibn Arabi and involves a chain of emanation from God, to spiritual man, earthly man, animals, plants, and minerals. The goal of spiritual life is to follow this path in the reverse direction, to unity with God, or al-Haqq (Reality, Truth). From the highest perspective, all is God (see Sufi metaphysics). Alevis admire al-Hallaj, a 10th-century Sufi who was accused of blasphemy and subsequently executed in Baghdad for saying "I am the Truth" (Ana al-Haqq).

There is some tension between folk tradition Aleviness and the Bektashi Order, which is a Sufi order founded on Alevi beliefs.[82] In certain Turkish communities other Sufi orders (the Halveti-Jerrahi and some of the Rifaʽi) have incorporated significant Alevi influence.

Wahdat al-Mawjud edit

Bektashism places much emphasis on the concept of Wahdat al-Mawjud وحدة الوجود, the "Unity of Being" that was formulated by Ibn Arabi. Bektashism is also heavily permeated with Shiite concepts, such as the marked veneration of Ali, the Twelve Imams, and the ritual commemoration of Ashurah marking the Battle of Karbala. The old Persian holiday of Nowruz is celebrated by Bektashis as Imam Ali's birthday.

In keeping with the central belief of Wahdat Al-Mawjud the Bektashi see reality contained in Haqq-Muhammad-Ali, a single unified entity. Bektashi do not consider this a form of trinity. There are many other practices and ceremonies that share similarity with other faiths, such as a ritual meal (muhabbet) and yearly confession of sins to a baba (magfirat-i zunub مغفرة الذنوب).

Bektashis base their practices and rituals on their non-orthodox and mystical interpretation and understanding of the Qur'an and the prophetic practice (Sunnah). They have no written doctrine specific to them, thus rules and rituals may differ depending on under whose influence one has been taught. Bektashis generally revere Sufi mystics outside of their own order, such as Ibn Arabi, Al-Ghazali and Jelalludin Rumi who are close in spirit to them.

Mysticism edit

Bektashism is initiatic and members must traverse various levels or ranks as they progress along the spiritual path to the Reality. First level members are called aşıks عاشق. They are those who, while not having taken initiation into the order, are nevertheless drawn to it. Following initiation (called nasip) one becomes a mühip محب. After some time as a mühip, one can take further vows and become a dervish.

The next level above dervish is that of baba. The baba (lit. father) is considered to be the head of a tekke and qualified to give spiritual guidance (irshad إرشاد). Above the baba is the rank of halife-baba (or dede, grandfather). Traditionally there were twelve of these, the most senior being the "dedebaba" (great-grandfather).

The dedebaba was considered to be the highest ranking authority in the Bektashi Order. Traditionally the residence of the dedebaba was the Pir Evi (The Saint's Home) which was located in the shrine of Hajji Bektash Wali in the central Anatolian town of Hacıbektaş (Solucakarahüyük).

Non-Islamic elements edit

Alevism is indeed heavily influenced by old Turkic and shamanistic beliefs. Concepts such as Odjak, inclusive social roles for women, musical performances, various rituals celebrating the nature or the seasons (like Hıdırellez) and some customs like the cult of ancestors, trees and rocks are both observed in Alevism and Tengrism.[83][84]

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ Yildirim, Riza (2019). "The Safavid-Qizilbash Ecumene and the Formation of the Qizilbash-Alevi Community in the Ottoman Empire, c. 1500–c. 1700". Iranian Studies. 52 (3–4): 449–483. doi:10.1080/00210862.2019.1646120. S2CID 204476564. Retrieved 14 April 2023 – via www.academia.edu.
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Bibliography edit

General introductions
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  • Engin, Ismail & Franz, Erhard (2000). Aleviler / Alewiten. Cilt 1 Band: Kimlik ve Tarih / Identität und Geschichte. Hamburg: Deutsches Orient Institut (Mitteilungen Band 59/2000). ISBN 3-89173-059-4
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Kurdish Alevis
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Alevi / Bektashi history
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Ghulat sects in general
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  • Moosa, Matti (1988). Extremist Shiites: The Ghulat Sects, Syracuse University Press.
  • Van Bruinessen, Martin (2005). "." French translation published as: "Les pratiques religieuses dans le monde turco-iranien: changements et continuités", Cahiers d'Études sur la Méditerranée Orientale et le Monde Turco-Iranien, no. 39–40, 101–121.
Alevi Identity
  • Erdemir, Aykan (2005). "Tradition and Modernity: Alevis' Ambiguous Terms and Turkey's Ambivalent Subjects", Middle Eastern Studies, 2005, vol.41, no.6, pp. 937–951.
  • Greve, Martin and Ulas Özdemir and Raoul Motika, eds. 2020. Aesthetic and Performative Dimensions of Alevi Cultural Heritage. Ergon Verlag. 215 pages. ISBN 978-3956506406
  • Koçan, Gürcan/Öncü, Ahmet (2004) "Citizen Alevi in Turkey: Beyond Confirmation and Denial." Journal of Historical Sociology, 17/4, pp. 464–489.
  • Olsson, Tord & Elizabeth Özdalga/Catharina Raudvere, eds. (1998). Alevi Identity: Cultural, Religious and Social Perspectives. Istanbul: Swedish Research Institute.
  • Stokes, Martin (1996). "Ritual, Identity and the State: An Alevi (Shi’a) Cem Ceremony."In Kirsten E. Schulze et al. (eds.), Nationalism, Minorities and Diasporas: Identities and Rights in the Middle East,, pp. 194–196.
  • Vorhoff, Karin (1995). Zwischen Glaube, Nation und neuer Gemeinschaft: Alevitische Identität in der Türkei der Gegenwart. Berlin.
Alevism in Europe
  • Geaves, Ron (2003) "Religion and Ethnicity: Community Formation in the British Alevi Community." Koninklijke Brill NV 50, pp. 52– 70.
  • Kosnick, Kira (2004) "‘Speaking in One’s Own Voice’: Representational Strategies of Alevi Turkish Migrants on Open-Access Television in Berlin." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 30/5, pp. 979–994.
  • Massicard, Elise (2003) "Alevist Movements at Home and Abroad: Mobilization Spaces and Disjunction." New Perspective on Turkey, 28, pp. 163–188.
  • Rigoni, Isabelle (2003) "Alevis in Europe: A Narrow Path towards Visibility." In: Paul J. White/Joost Jongerden (eds.) Turkey's Alevi Enigma: A Comprehensive Overview, Leiden: Brill, pp. 159–173.
  • Sökefeld, Martin (2002) "Alevi Dedes in the German Diaspora: The Transformation of a Religious Institution." Zeitschrift für Ethnologie, 127, pp. 163–189.
  • Sökefeld, Martin (2004) "Alevis in Germany and the Question of Integration" paper presented at the Conference on the Integration of Immigrants from Turkey in Austria, Germany and Holland, Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, February 27–28, 2004.
  • Sökefeld, Martin & Suzanne Schwalgin (2000). "Institutions and their Agents in Diaspora: A Comparison of Armenians in Athens and Alevis in Germany." Paper presented at the sixth European Association of Social Anthropologist Conference, Krakau.
  • Thomä-Venske, Hanns (1990). "The Religious Life of Muslim in Berlin." In: Thomas Gerholm/Yngve Georg Lithman (eds.) The New Islamic Presence in Western Europe, New York: Mansell, pp. 78–87.
  • Wilpert, Czarina (1990) "Religion and Ethnicity: Orientations, Perceptions and Strategies among Turkish Alevi and Sunni Migrants in Berlin." In: Thomas Gerholm/Yngve Georg Lithman (eds.) The New Islamic Presence in Western Europe. New York: Mansell, pp. 88–106.
  • Zirh, Besim Can (2008) "Euro-Alevis: From Gastarbeiter to Transnational Community." In: Anghel, Gerharz, Rescher and Salzbrunn (eds.) The Making of World Society: Perspectives from Transnational Research. Transcript; 103–130.
Bibliographies
  • Vorhoff, Karin. (1998), "Academic and Journalistic Publications on the Alevi and Bektashi of Turkey." In: Tord Olsson/Elizabeth Özdalga/Catharina Raudvere (eds.) Alevi Identity: Cultural, Religious and Social Perspectives, Istanbul: Swedish Research Institute, pp. 23–50.
Turkish-language works
  • Ata, Kelime. (2007), Alevilerin İlk Siyasal Denemesi: (Türkiye Birlik Partisi) (1966–1980). Ankara: Kelime Yayınevi.
  • Aydın, Ayhan. (2008), Abidin Özgünay: Yazar Yayıncı ve Cem Dergisi Kurucusu. İstanbul: Niyaz Yayınları.
  • Balkız, Ali. (1999), Sivas’tan Sydney’e Pir Sultan. Ankara: İtalik.
  • Balkız, Ali. (2002), Pir Sultan’da Birlik Mücadelesi (Hızır Paşalar’a Yanıt). Ankara: İtalik.
  • Bilgöl, Hıdır Ali. (1996), Aleviler ve Canlı Fotoğraflar, Alev Yayınları.
  • Coşkun, Zeki (1995) Aleviler, Sünniler ve ... Öteki Sivas, Istanbul: İletişim Yayınları.
  • Dumont, Paul. (1997), "Günümüz Türkiye’sinde Aleviliğin Önemi" içinde Aynayı Yüzüme Ali Göründü Gözüme: Yabancı Araştırmacıların Gözüyle Alevilik, editör: İlhan Cem Erseven. İsntabul: Ant, 141–161.
  • Engin, Havva ve Engin, Ismail (2004). Alevilik. Istanbul: Kitap Yayınevi.
  • Gül, Zeynel. (1995), Yol muyuz Yolcu muyuz? İstanbul: Can Yayınları.
  • Gül, Zeynel. (1999), Dernekten Partiye: Avrupa Alevi Örgütlenmesi. Ankara: İtalik.
  • Güler, Sabır. (2008), Aleviliğin Siyasal Örgütlenmesi: Modernleşme, Çözülme ve Türkiye Birlik Partisi. Ankara: Dipnot.
  • İrat, Ali Murat. (2008), Devletin Bektaşi Hırkası / Devlet, Aleviler ve Ötekiler. İstanbul: Chiviyazıları.
  • Kaleli, Lütfü. (2000), "1964–1997 Yılları Arasında Alevi Örgütleri" içinde Aleviler/Alewiten: Kimlik ve Tarih/ Indentität und Geschichte, editörler: İsmail Engin ve Erhard Franz. Hamburg: Deutsches Orient-Institut, 223–241.
  • Kaleli, Lütfü. (2000), Alevi Kimliği ve Alevi Örgütlenmeri. İstanbul: Can Yayınları.
  • Kaplan, İsmail. (2000), "Avrupa’daki Alevi Örgütlenmesine Bakış" içinde Aleviler/Alewiten: Kimlik ve Tarih/ Indentität und Geschichte, editörler: İsmail Engin ve Erhard Franz. Hamburg: Deutsches Orient-Institut, 241–260.
  • Kaplan, İsmail. (2009), Alevice: İnancımız ve Direncimiz. Köln: AABF Yayınları.
  • Kocadağ, Burhan. (1996), Alevi Bektaşi Tarihi. İstanbul: Can Yayınları.
  • Massicard, Elise. (2007), Alevi Hareketinin Siyasallaşması. İstanbul: İletişim.
  • Melikoff, Irene. (1993), Uyur İdik Uyardılar. İstanbul: Cem Yayınevi.
  • Okan, Murat. (2004), Türkiye’de Alevilik / Antropolojik Bir Yaklaşım. Ankara: İmge.
  • Özerol, Süleyman. (2009), Hasan Nedim Şahhüseyinoğlu. Ankara: Ürün.
  • Şahhüseyinoğlu, H. Nedim. (2001), Hızır Paşalar: Bir İhracın Perde Arkası. Ankara: İtalik.
  • Şahhüseyinoğlu, Nedim. (1997), Pir Sultan Kültür Derneği’nin Demokrasi Laiklik ve Özgürlük Mücadelesi. Ankara: PSAKD Yayınları.
  • Şahhüseyinoğlu, Nedim. (2001), Alevi Örgütlerinin Tarihsel Süreci. Ankara: İtalik.
  • Salman, Meral. 2006, Müze Duvarlarına Sığmayan Dergah: Alevi – Bektaşi Kimliğinin Kuruluş Sürecinde Hacı Bektaş Veli Anma Görenleri. Ankara: Kalan.
  • Saraç, Necdet. (2010), Alevilerin Siyasal Tarihi. İstanbul: Cem.
  • Şener, Cemal ve Miyase İlknur. (1995), Şeriat ve Alevilik: Kırklar Meclisi’nden Günümüze Alevi Örgütlenmesi. İstanbul: Ant.
  • Tosun, Halis. (2002), Alevi Kimliğiyle Yaşamak. İstanbul: Can Yayınları.
  • Vergin, Nur (2000, [1981]), Din, Toplum ve Siyasal Sistem, İstanbul: Bağlam.
  • Yaman, Ali (2000) "Anadolu Aleviliği’nde Ocak Sistemi Ve Dedelik Kurumu." Alevi Bektaşi.
  • Zırh, Besim Can. (2005), "Avro-Aleviler: Ziyaretçi İşçilikten Ulus-aşırı Topluluğa" Kırkbudak 2: 31–58.
  • Zırh, Besim Can. (2006), "Avrupa Alevi Konfederasyonu Turgut Öker ile Görüşme" Kırkbudak 2: 51–71.

External links edit

  • (in English)
  • A Sufi Metamorphosis: Imam Ali
  • History of Sufism / Islamic Mysticism and the importance of Ali
  • (in English)
  • Alevi Bektaşi Research Site (in Turkish)
  • Semah from a TV show (YouTube)
  • Semah – several samples (YouTube)

alevism, this, article, about, religious, group, mainly, turkey, religious, beliefs, pertaining, specifically, kurds, kurdish, arab, shia, muslim, group, alawites, descendants, talib, alids, muslim, alevi, religion, ishikism, anatolian, qizilbashism, turkish, . This article is about the religious group mainly in Turkey For the religious beliefs pertaining specifically to Kurds see Kurdish Alevism For the Arab Shia Muslim group see Alawites For the descendants of Ali ibn Abi Talib see Alids For non Muslim Alevi religion see Ishikism Alevism Anatolian Alevism or Qizilbashism 10 ae ˈ l ɛ v ɪ z e m Turkish Alevilik Anadolu Aleviligi or Kizilbaslik Kurdish Elewiti Reya Heqi 11 12 13 Azerbaijani Elevilik Qizilbasliq is a heterodox 14 and syncretic 15 Islamic tradition whose adherents follow the mystical Islamic teachings of Haji Bektash Veli who is supposed to have taught the teachings of the Twelve Imams whilst incorporating some traditions from Turkish Shamanism 16 Differing from Sunni Islam and Usuli Twelver Shia Islam Alevis have no binding religious dogmas and teachings are passed on by a spiritual leader as with Sufi orders 17 They acknowledge the six articles of faith of Islam but may differ regarding their interpretation 9 AlevismAlevilikScriptureQuran Nahj al Balagha Makalat and BuyruksLeaderDedeTeachings ofProphets and MessengersTwelve ImamsSeven Great PoetsSafavid orderHaji Bektash VeliAhmad YasawiYunus EmreAhi EvranBalim SultanSari Saltik 8 TheologyHaqq Muhammad AliRegionTurkeyLanguageTurkish Albanian Azerbaijani Kurdish and Zazaki 9 LiturgyCem SemaHeadquartersHaji Bektash Veli Complex Nevsehir TurkeyFounderHaji Bektash VeliOrigin13th century SulucakarahoyukSeparated fromSunni and Usuli Twelver theologyOther name s Kizilbaslik Haji Bektash Veli Complex Originally one of many Sufi approaches within Sunni Islam by the 16th century the order adopted some tenets of the Shia Islam including a veneration of ʿAli and the twelve imams as well as a variety of syncretic beliefs The Alevis acquired political importance in the 15th century when the order dominated the Janissaries 18 The term Alevi Bektashi is currently a widely and frequently used expression in the religious discourse of Turkey as an umbrella term for the two religious groups of Alevism and Bektashism 19 Adherents of Alevism are found primarily in Turkey and estimates of the percentage of Turkey s population that are Alevi include between 4 and 25 9 20 21 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Beliefs 2 1 God 2 2 Spirits and afterlife 2 3 Scriptures and prophets 2 4 Twelve Imams 2 5 Plurality 2 6 Perfect human being 2 7 Creed and jurisprudence 3 Practices 3 1 Dede 3 2 Cem and Cemevi 3 3 Twelve services 3 4 Festivals 3 4 1 Mourning of Muharram 3 4 2 Hidirellez 3 4 3 Musahiplik 3 5 Folk practices 3 5 1 Ziyarat to sacred places 3 5 2 Almsgiving 4 History 4 1 Seljuk period 4 2 Ottoman period 4 3 Republic of Turkey 5 Organization 5 1 Relationship with Shia Islam 5 1 1 Relationship with Alawites 5 2 Relationship with Sunnis 6 Demographics 6 1 Population estimates 6 2 Social groups 7 Influences of other beliefs and sects on Alevism 7 1 Sufi elements in Alevism 7 1 1 Wahdat al Mawjud 7 2 Mysticism 7 3 Non Islamic elements 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEtymology editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Alevi ae ˈ l ɛ v i is generally explained as referring to Ali the cousin and son in law of Muhammad The name represents a Turkish form of the word ʻAlawiyy Arabic علوي of or pertaining to Ali A minority viewpoint is that of the Ishikists who assert Alevi was derived from Alev flame in Turkish in reference to fire which is extensively used in Alevi rituals According to them the use of candles is based on Quran surah an Nur verses 35 36 God is the Light of the heavens and the earth The example of His light is like a niche within which there is a lamp the lamp is encased in a glass the glass is like a radiant planet which is lit from a blessed olive tree that is neither of the east nor of the west its oil nearly gives off light even if not touched by fire Light upon light God guides to His light whom He pleases And God sets forth examples for the people and God is aware of all things Lit is such a Light in houses which God has permitted to be raised to honor for the celebration in them of His name In them is He glorified in the mornings and in the evenings again and again Beliefs editMain articles Faith and Iman concept According to scholar Soner Cagaptay Alevism is a relatively unstructured interpretation of Islam 22 Journalist Patrick Kingsley states that for some self described Alevi their religion is simply a cultural identity rather than a form of worship 14 Many teachings are based on an orally transmitted tradition traditionally kept secret from outsiders but now widely accessible Alevis commonly profess the Islamic shahada but adding Ali is the friend of God The basis for Alevis most distinctive beliefs is found in the Buyruks compiled writings and dialogues of Sheikh Safi ad din Ardabili and other worthies Also included are hymns nefes by figures such as Shah Ismail or Pir Sultan Abdal stories of Hajji Bektash and other lore The Alevi beliefs among Turkish Alevis and Kurdish Alevis diverge as Kurdish Alevis put more emphasis on Pir Sultan Abdal than Haji Bektash Veli and Kurdish Alevism is rooted more in nature veneration 23 24 God edit Main articles Allah Muhammad Ali and Haqq Muhammad Ali In Alevi cosmology God is also called Al Haqq the Truth 25 or referred to as Allah God created life so the created world can reflect His Being 26 Alevis believe in the unity of Allah Muhammad and Ali but this is not a trinity composed of God and the historical figures of Muhammad and Ali Rather Muhammad and Ali are representations of Allah s light and not of Allah himself being neither independent from God nor separate characteristics of Him 25 In Alevi writings are many references to the unity of Muhammad and Ali such as nbsp A representation of the sword of Ali the Zulfiqar in an Ottoman emblem Ali Muhammed dir uh dur fah ad Muhammad Ali Ali is Muhammad Muhammad is Ali Gordum bir elmadir el Hamdu liLlah I ve seen an apple all praise is for God 27 The phrase For the love of Haqq Muhammad Ali Hakk Muhammad Ali askina is common to several Alevi prayers Spirits and afterlife edit Alevis believe in the immortality of the soul 25 the literal existence of supernatural beings including good angels melekler and bad angels seytanlar 28 bad ones as encourager of human s evil desires nefs and jinn cinler as well as the evil eye 29 Angels feature in Alevi cosmogony Although there is no fixed creation narrative among Alevis it is generally accepted that God created five archangels who have been invited to the chamber of God Inside they found a light representing the light of Muhammad and Ali A recount of the Quranic story one of the archangels refused to prostrate before the light arguing that the light is a created body just like him and therefore inappropriate to worship He remains at God s service but rejects the final test and turns back to darkness From this primordial decline the devil s enmity towards Adam emerged The archangels constitute of the same four archangels as within orthodox Islam The fifth archangel namely Azazil fell from grace thus not included among the canonical archangels apart from this story 30 Another story features the archangel Gabriel Cebrail who is asked by God who they are Gabriel answers I am I and you are you Gabriel gets punished for his haughty answer and is sent away until Ali reveals a secret to him When God asks him again he answers You are the creator and I am your creation Afterwards Gabriel was accepted and introduced to Muhammad and Ali 30 Scriptures and prophets edit Alevis acknowledge the four revealed scriptures also recognized in Islam the Tawrat Torah the Zabur Psalms the Injil Gospel and the Quran 31 Additionally Alevis are not opposed to looking to other religious books outside the four major ones as sources for their beliefs including Hadiths Nahjul Balagha and Buyruks Alevism also acknowledges the Islamic prophet Mohammed Unlike the vast majority of Muslims Alevis do not regard interpretations of the Quran today as binding or infallible since the true meaning the Quran is considered to be taken as a secret by Ali and must be taught by a teacher who transmits the teachings of Ali Buyruk to his disciple 32 Twelve Imams edit Main article Twelve Imams The Twelve Imams are part of another common Alevi belief Each Imam represents a different aspect of the world They are realized as twelve services or On Iki Hizmet which are performed by members of the Alevi community Each Imam is believed to be a reflection of Ali ibn Abu Talib the first Imam of the Shi ites and there are references to the First Ali Birinci Ali Imam Hasan the Second Ali Ikinci Ali and so on up to the Twelfth Ali Onikinci Ali Imam Mehdi The Twelfth Imam is hidden and represents the Messianic Age Plurality edit The plurality in nature is attributed to the infinite potential energy of Kull i Nafs when it takes corporeal form as it descends into being from Allah During the Cem ceremony the cantor or asik sings All of us alive or lifeless are from one this is ineffable Sultan For to love and to fall in love has been my fate from time immemorial This is sung as a reminder that the reason for creation is love so that the followers may know themselves and each other and that they may love that which they know Perfect human being edit Main article Al Insan al Kamil nbsp A statue of Yunus Emre who codified the theory of Insan i Kamil 33 Linked to the concept of the Prototypical Human is that of the al Insan al Kamil Perfect Human Being Although it is common to refer to Ali and Haji Bektash Veli or the other Alevi saints as manifestations of the perfect human being the Perfect Human Being is also identified with our true identity as pure consciousness hence the Qur anic concept of human beings not having original sin consciousness being pure and perfect citation needed The human task is to fully realize this state while still in material human form The perfect human being is also defined in practical terms as one who is in full moral control of his or her hands tongue and loins eline diline beline sahip treats all kinds of people equally yetmis iki millete ayni gozle bakar and serves the interests of others One who has achieved this kind of enlightenment is also called eren or munevver enlightened citation needed Creed and jurisprudence edit See also Kaysanites Khurramites Qarmatians and Hurufism nbsp Tomb of Ahi Evren founder and leader of the Ahi Brotherhood which evolved into a Beylik later on 34 Sources differ on how important formal doctrine is among contemporary Alevi According to scholar Russell Powell there is a tradition of informal Dede courts within the Alevi society but regarding Islamic jurisprudence or fiqh there has been little scholarship on Alevi influences in it 35 The Alevi Turks has a unique belief system tracing back to Kaysanites and Khurramites which are considered ghulat Shi ism According to Turkish scholar Abdulbaki Golpinarli the Qizilbash Red Heads of the 16th century a religious and political movement in Azerbaijan that helped to establish the Safavid dynasty were spiritual descendants of the Khurramites 36 Among the members of the Qizilbash order who are a subsect of the Alevis Abu Muslim who assisted Abbasid Caliphate to beat the Umayyad Caliphate but who was later eliminated and murdered by Caliph al Mansur and Babak Khorramdin who incited a rebellion against Abbasid Caliphate and consequently was killed by Caliph al Mu tasim are highly respected This belief provides strong clues about Kaysanite and Khurramite origins In addition Safavid order leader Ismail I is a highly regarded individual in Alevism associating them with the theology of Twelver Shia Islam citation needed Practices editMain article Four Doors The Alevi spiritual path yol is commonly understood to take place through four major life stages or gates These may be further subdivided into four gates forty levels Dort Kapi Kirk Makam The first gate religious law is considered elementary and this may be perceived as subtle criticism of other Muslim traditions The following are major crimes that cause an Alevi to be declared duskun shunned 37 killing a person committing adultery divorcing one s wife without a just reason stealing backbiting gossiping Most Alevi activity takes place in the context of the second gate spiritual brotherhood during which one submits to a living spiritual guide dede pir mursid The existence of the third and fourth gates is mostly theoretical though some older Alevis have apparently received initiation into the third 38 Rakia a fruit brandy is used as a sacramental element by the Bektashi Order 39 and Alevi Jem ceremonies where it is not considered alcoholic and is referred to as dem 40 Further information Pir Sufism Dedes and Murshid Dede edit A Dede literally meaning grandfather is a traditional leader that is claimed to be from the lineage of Muhammad that performs ritual baptisms for newborns officiates at funerals and organises weekly gatherings at cemevis 41 Cem and Cemevi edit Main articles Jem Alevism and Cemevi nbsp People performing Cem nbsp Baglama Alevi religious cultural and other social activities take place in assembly houses Cemevi The ceremony s prototype is the Muhammad s nocturnal ascent into heaven where he beheld a gathering of forty saints Kirklar Meclisi and the Divine Reality made manifest in their leader Ali The Cem ceremony features music singing and dancing Samah in which both women and men participate Rituals are performed in Turkish Zazaki Kurmanji and other local languages Baglama Main article Baglama During the Cem ceremony the Asik plays the Baglama whilst singing spiritual songs some of which are centuries old and well known amongst Alevis Every song called a Nefes has spiritual meaning and aims to teach the participants important lessons Samah A family of ritual dances characterized by turning and swirling is an inseparable part of any cem Samah is performed by men and women together to the accompaniment of the Baglama The dances symbolize for example the revolution of the planets around the Sun by man and woman turning in circles and the putting off of one s self and uniting with God Gorgu Cemi The Rite of Integration gorgu cemi is a complex ritual occasion in which a variety of tasks are allotted to incumbents bound together by extrafamilial brotherhood musahiplik who undertake a dramatization of unity and integration under the direction of the spiritual leader dede Dem The love of the creator for the created and vice versa is symbolised in the Cem ceremony by the use of fruit juice and or red wine citation needed Dem which represents the intoxication of the lover in the beloved During the ceremony Dem is one of the twelve duties of the participants see above Sohbet At the closing of the cem ceremony the Dede who leads the ceremony engages the participants in a discussion chat this discussion is called a sohbet Twelve services edit There are twelve services Turkish On Iki hizmet performed by the twelve ministers of the cem Dede This is the leader of the Cem who represents Muhammad and Ali The Dede receives confession from the attendees at the beginning of the ceremony He also leads funerals Musahiplik marriage ceremonies and circumcisions The status of Dede is hereditary and he must be a descendant of Ali and Fatima Rehber This position represents Husayn The Rehber is a guide to the faithful and works closely with the Dede in the community Gozcu This position represents Abu Dharr al Ghifari S he is the assistant to the Rehber S he is the Cem keeper responsible for keeping the faithful calm Ceragci This position represents Jabir ibn Abd Allah and s he is the light keeper responsible for maintaining the light traditionally given by a lamp or candles Zakir This position represents Bilal ibn al Harith S he plays the baglama and recites songs and prayers Supurgeci This position represents Salman the Persian S he is responsible for cleaning the Cemevi hall and symbolically sweeping the carpets during the Cem Meydanci This position represents Hudhayfah ibn al Yaman Niyazci this position represents Muhammad ibn Maslamah S he is responsible for distributing the sacred meal Ibrikci this position represents Kamber S he is responsible for washing the hands of the attendees Kapici this position represents Ghulam Kaysan S he is responsible for calling the faithful to the Cem Peyikci this position represents Amri Ayyari Sakaci represents Ammar ibn Yasir Responsible for the distribution of water sherbet sharbat milk etc Festivals edit nbsp 10th of Muharrem The Day of Ashura Huseyn bin Ali was murdered at Kerbela Mourning of Muharram and the remembrance of this event by Jafaris Alevis and Bektashis together in Ottoman Empire Painted by Fausto Zonaro Main article Day of Ashura Alevis celebrate and commemorate the birth of Ali his wedding with Fatima the rescue of Yusuf from the well and the creation of the world on this day Various cem ceremonies and special programs are held Mourning of Muharram edit Main article Mourning of Muharram The Muslim month of Muharram begins 20 days after Eid ul Adha Kurban Bayrami Alevis observe a fast for the first twelve days known as the Mourning of Muharram Turkish Muharrem Matemi Yas i Muharrem or Matem Orucu Kurdish Rojiya Sine or Rojiya Miherreme This culminates in the festival of Ashura Asure which commemorates the martyrdom of Husayn at Karbala The fast is broken with a special dish also called asure prepared from a variety often twelve of fruits nuts and grains Many events are associated with this celebration including the salvation of Husayn s son Ali ibn Husayn from the massacre at Karbala thus allowing the bloodline of the family of Muhammad to continue Hidirellez edit nbsp A Persian miniature depicting Elijah and al Khiḍr A miniature version of Stories of the Prophets Main articles Hidirellez and Khidr Hidirellez honors the mysterious figure Khidr Turkish Hizir who is sometimes identified with Elijah Ilyas and is said to have drunk of the water of life Some hold that Khidr comes to the rescue of those in distress on land while Elijah helps those at sea and that they meet at a rose tree in the evening of every 6 May The festival is also celebrated in parts of the Balkans by the name of Erdelez where it falls on the same day as George s Day in Spring or Saint George s Day Khidr is also honored with a three day fast in mid February called Hizir Orucu In addition to avoiding any sort of comfort or enjoyment Alevis also abstain from food and water for the entire day though they do drink liquids other than water during the evening Note that the dates of the Khidr holidays can differ among Alevis most of whom use a lunar calendar but some a solar calendar Musahiplik edit Main article Musahiplik Musahiplik roughly Companionship is a covenant relationship between two men of the same age preferably along with their wives In a ceremony in the presence of a dede the partners make a lifelong commitment to care for the spiritual emotional and physical needs of each other and their children The ties between couples who have made this commitment is at least as strong as it is for blood relatives so much so that musahiplik is often called spiritual brotherhood manevi kardeslik The children of covenanted couples may not marry 42 Krisztina Kehl Bodrogi reports that the Tahtaci identify musahiplik with the first gate seriat since they regard it as a precondition for the second tarikat Those who attain to the third gate marifat gnosis must have been in a musahiplik relationship for at least twelve years Entry into the third gate dissolves the musahiplik relationship which otherwise persists unto death in a ceremony called Oz Verme Ayini ceremony of giving up the self The value corresponding to the second gate and necessary to enter the third is asinalik intimacy perhaps with God Its counterpart for the third gate is called pesinelik for the fourth gate hakikat Ultimate Truth cingildaslik or cengildeslik translations uncertain 43 Folk practices edit nbsp nbsp It is a common Alevi Sunni tradition to distribute lokma top and ashure below publicly in Turkey Main articles Eyup Sultan Mosque Ziyarat and DuaMany folk practices may be identified though few of them are specific to the Alevis In this connection scholar Martin van Bruinessen notes a sign from Turkey s Ministry of Religion attached to Istanbul s shrine of Eyup Sultan which presents a long list of superstitious practices that are emphatically declared to be non Islamic and objectionable such as lighting candles or placing wishing stones on the tomb tying pieces of cloth to the shrine or to the trees in front of it throwing money on the tomb asking the dead directly for help circling seven times around the trees in the courtyard or pressing one s face against the walls of the turbe in the hope of a supernatural cure tying beads to the shrine and expecting supernatural support from them sacrificing roosters or turkeys as a vow to the shrine The list is probably an inventory of common local practices the authorities wish to prevent from re emerging 44 Other similar practices include kissing door frames of holy rooms not stepping on the threshold of holy buildings seeking prayers from reputed healers and making lokma and sharing it with others Also Ashure is made and shared with friends and family during the month of Muharram in which the Day of Ashure takes place 45 Ziyarat to sacred places edit nbsp The tomb of Pir Sultan Abdal in Sivas nbsp Entrance of Karacaahmet Cemetery in Istanbul Turkey Main articles Hacibektas Karacaahmet and Sahkulu Further information Pir Sufism Performing ziyarat and du a at the tombs of Alevi Bektashi saints or pirs is quite common Some of the most frequently visited sites are the shrines of Sahkulu and Karacaahmet both in Istanbul Abdal Musa Antalya Seyyid Battal Gazi Complex Eskisehir Hamza Baba Izmir Hasandede Kirikkale 46 In contrast with the traditional secrecy of the Cem ceremony ritual the events at these cultural centers and sites are open to the public In the case of the Hacibektas celebration since 1990 the activities there have been taken over by Turkey s Ministry of Culture in the interest of promoting tourism and Turkish patriotism rather than Alevi spirituality The annual celebrations held at Hacibektas 16 August and Sivas the Pir Sultan Abdal Kultur Etkinlikleri 23 24 June Some Alevis make pilgrimages to mountains and other natural sites believed to be imbued with holiness Almsgiving edit Main articles dargah waqf and zakat Alevis are expected to give zakat but there is no set formula or prescribed amount for annual charitable donation as there is in other forms of Islam 2 5 of possessions above a certain minimum Rather they are expected to give the excess according to Qur an 2 219 A common method of Alevi almsgiving is through donating food especially sacrificial animals to be shared with worshippers and guests Alevis also donate money to be used to help the poor to support the religious educational and cultural activities of Alevi centers and organizations dargahs awqaf and meetings and to provide scholarships for students History editMain article Alevi history nbsp Ottoman miniature of the founder of the Bektashiyyah Sufi order Haci Bektas i Veli Ḥajji Baktash Wali a murid of Malamati Qalandari Sheikh Qutb ad Din Haydar who introduced the Ahmad Yasavi s doctrine of Four Doors and Forty Stending into his tariqah Seljuk period edit Further information Ak Koyunlu and Kara Koyunlu During the great Turkish expansion from Central Asia into Iran and Anatolia in the Seljuk period 11 12th centuries Turkmen and Kurdish nomad tribes accepted a Sufi and pro Ali form of Islam that co existed with some of their pre Islamic customs Their conversion to Islam in this period was achieved largely through the efforts not of textual scholars ulema expounding the finer points of Koranic exegesis and shari a law but by charismatic Sufi dervishes a belief whose cult of Muslim saint worship mystical divination and millenarianism spoke more directly to the steppe mindset These tribes dominated Anatolia for centuries with their religious warriors ghazi spearheading the drive against Byzantines and Crusaders 47 page needed verification needed Ottoman period edit Further information Ottoman persecution of Alevis Qizilbash Sahkulu and Sahkulu rebellion As in Khorasan and West Asia before the Turkmens who spearheaded the Ottomans drive into the Balkans and West Asia were more inspired by a vaguely Shiite folk Islam than by formal religion Many times Ottoman campaigns were accompanied or guided by Bektasi dervishes spiritual heirs of the 13th century Sufi saint Haji Bektash Veli himself a native of Khorasan After the conquest of Constantinople in 1453 the Ottoman state became increasingly determined to assert its fiscal but also its juridical and political control over the farthest reaches of the Empire 47 The resulting Qizilbash revolts a series of millenarian anti state uprisings by the heterodox Turkmen population of Anatolia that culminated in the establishment of a militantly Shiite rival state in neighbouring Iran 47 The Ottoman Empire later proclaimed themselves its defenders against the Safavid Shia state and related sects This created a gap between the Sunni Ottoman ruling elite and the Alevi Anatolian population Anatolia became a battlefield between Safavids and Ottomans each determined to include it in their empire Republic of Turkey edit According to Eren Sari Alevi saw Kemal Ataturk as a Mahdi savior sent to save them from the Sunni Ottoman yoke 48 However pogroms against Alevi did not cease after the establishment of Ataturk s republic In attacks against leftists in the 1970s ultranationalists and reactionaries killed many Alevis Malatya in 1978 Maras in 1979 and Corum in 1980 witnessed the murder of hundreds of Alevis the torching of hundreds of homes and lootings 49 50 Alevis have been victims of pogroms during both Ottoman times and under the Turkish republic up until the 1993 Sivas massacre 14 49 50 The historical emergence of the Alevi ṬariqahOrganization editAli Hasan and Husayn in Hagia Sophia nbsp Ali right and Husayn ibn Ali left medallions in the Hagia Sophia nbsp Hasan ibn Ali medallion in Hagia Sophia In contrast to the Bektashi order tariqa which like other Sufi orders is based on a silsila initiatory chain or lineage of teachers and their students Alevi leaders succeed to their role on the basis of family descent Perhaps ten percent of Alevis belong to a religious elite called ocak hearth indicating descent from Ali and or various other saints and heroes Ocak members are called ocakzades or sons of the hearth This system apparently originated in the Safavid state Alevi leaders are variously called murshid pir rehber or dede Groups that conceive of these as ranks of a hierarchy as in the Bektashi Order disagree as to the order The last of these dede grandfather is the term preferred by the scholarly literature Ocakzades may attain to the position of dede on the basis of selection by a father from among several sons character and learning In contrast to Alevi rhetoric on the equality of the sexes it is generally assumed that only males may fill such leadership roles Traditionally dedes did not merely lead rituals but led their communities often in conjunction with local notables such as the agas large landowners of the Dersim Region They also acted as judges or arbiters presiding over village courts called Duskunluk Meydani Ordinary Alevi would owe allegiance to a particular dede lineage but not others on the basis of pre existing family or village relations Some fall instead under the authority of Bektashi dargahs In the wake of 20th century urbanization which removed young laborers from the villages and socialist influence which looked upon the dedes with suspicion the old hierarchy has largely broken down Many dedes now receive salaries from Alevi cultural centers which arguably subordinates their role Such centers no longer feature community business or deliberation such as the old ritual of reconciliation but emphasize musical and dance performance to the exclusion of these 51 Dedes are now approached on a voluntary basis and their role has become more circumscribed limited to religious rituals research and giving advice According to John Shindeldecker Alevis are proud to point out that they are monogamous Alevi women are encouraged to get the best education they can and Alevi women are free to go into any occupation they choose 52 Relationship with Shia Islam edit Alevis are classified as a sect of Shia Islam 53 and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini decreed Alevis to be part of the Shia fold in the 1970s 54 However Alevi philosophies customs and rituals are appreciably different from those of mainstream orthodox Usulis According to Alevis which Ali and Muhammad are likened to the two sides of a coin or the two halves of an apple citation needed Relationship with Alawites edit Similarities with the Alawites of Syria exist citation needed Both are viewed as heterodox citation needed syncretic Islamic minorities whose names both mean devoted to Ali the son in law and cousin of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad and fourth caliph following Muhammad as leader of the Muslims and are located primarily in the Eastern Mediterranean Like mainstream Shia they are known as Twelvers as they both recognize the Twelve Imams How the two minorities relate is disputed According to scholar Marianne Aringberg Laanatza the Turkish Alevis do not relate themselves in any way to the Alawites in Syria 55 However journalist Jeffrey Gettlemand claims that both Alevi and the less than one million Alawite minority in Turkey seem to be solidly behind Syria s embattled strongman Bashar al Assad and leery of Syrian Sunni rebels 56 Deutsche Welle journalist Dorian Jones states that Turkish Alevis are suspicious of the anti Assad uprising in Syria They are worried of the repercussions for Alawites there as well as for themselves 57 Some sources Martin van Bruinessen and Jamal Shah mistake Alawites living in Turkey to be Alevis calling Alevis a blanket term for a large number of different heterodox communities 58 but others do not giving a list of the differences between the two groups These include their liturgical languages Turkish or Kurdish for Alevi Arabic for Alawites Opposing political nationalism with Alawites supporting their ruling dictatorship and considering Turks including Alevis an opponent of its Arab historic interests citation needed Even Kurdish and Balkan Alevi populations pray in Turkish 22 Unlike Alevis Alawites not only traditionally lack mosques but do not maintain their own places for worship except for shrines to their leaders citation needed Alevi possess an extensive and widely read religious literature mainly composed of spiritual songs poems and epic verse Their origins are also different The Alawite faith was founded in the ninth century by Abu Shuayb Muhammad ibn Nusayr Alevism started in the 14th century by mystical Islamic dissenters in Central Asia and represent more of a movement rather than a sect Relationship with Sunnis edit The relationship between Alevis and Sunnis is one of mutual suspicion and prejudice dating back to the Ottoman period Hundreds of Alevis were murdered in sectarian violence in the years that preceded the 1980 coup and as late as the 1990s dozens were killed with impunity 14 While pogroms have not occurred since then Erdogan has declared a cemevi is not a place of worship it is a center for cultural activities Muslims should only have one place of worship 14 Alevis which claim that they have been subject to intolerant Sunni nationalism that has been unwilling to recognize Alevi uniqueness 59 Demographics editSee also Kurdish Alevism nbsp Distribution of Alevi population in Turkey Red Anatolian Alevis Turks and Kurds Dark red Alawites Arabs in Southern Turkey nbsp Alevis in a demonstration in Hamburg Most Alevi live in Turkey where they are a minority and Sunni Muslims the majority The size of the Alevi population is likewise disputed but most estimates place them somewhere between 5 and 10 million people or about 10 of the population 60 61 Estimates of the percentage of Turkey s population that are Alevi range between 4 and 15 9 20 Scattered minorities live in the Balkans the Caucasus Cyprus Greece Iran and the diaspora such as Germany and France 62 In the 2021 United Kingdom census Alevism was discovered to be the eighth largest religion in England and Wales after Christianity Islam Hinduism Sikhism Buddhism Judaism and Paganism 63 Different estimations exist on the ethnic composition of the Alevi population Although Turks are probably the largest ethnic group among Alevis considering their historical towns and cities citation needed While Dressler stated in 2008 that about a third of the Alevi population is Kurdish 24 Hamza Aksut argued that the majority is Kurdish 64 when all groups he considers as Alevis such as the Yarsanis 65 are counted 66 Most Alevis are probably of Kizilbash or Bektashi origin 9 The Alevis Kizilbash are traditionally predominantly rural and acquire identity by parentage Bektashis however are predominantly urban and formally claim that membership is open to any Muslim The groups are separately organized but subscribe to virtually the same system of beliefs 9 Population estimates edit The Alevi population has been estimated as follows Approximately 20 million according to Daily Sabah a newspaper close to the government in 2021 67 12 521 000 according to Sabahat Akkiraz an MP from CHP 68 approx 15 million Krisztina Kehl Bodrogi 69 4 of total population of Turkey KONDA Research 2021 20 In Turkey 15 of Turkey s population approx 10 6 million Shankland 2006 70 20 to 25 million according to Minority Rights Group 9 There is a native 3 000 Alevi community in Western Thrace Greece 71 The predominant religion of the Aynu people of western China is Alevism 72 73 74 There are estimated to be around 30 50 thousand Aynu mostly located on the fringe of the Taklamakan Desert 75 76 25 672 Alevi live in England and Wales 63 600k to 700k Alevi live in Germany 77 78 100k to 200k Alevi live in France 79 80 Social groups edit nbsp Calligraphic hat in Alevi Bektashism A Turkish scholar working in France has distinguished four main groups among contemporary Alevis in Turkey 81 The first group who form a majority of the Alevi population regard themselves as true Muslims and are prepared to cooperate with the state It adheres to the way of Jafar as Sadiq the Sixth Imam of Shia Islam This group s concept of God is the same as Orthodox Islam and like their Shia counterparts they reject the first three chosen Caliphs whom Sunni accept as legitimate and accept only Ali as the actual and true Caliph 81 The second group which has the second most following among Alevis are said to be under the active influence of the official Iranian Shia and to be confirmed adherents of the Twelver branch of Shia Islam and they reject the teachings of Bektashism Tariqa They follow the Ja fari jurisprudence and oppose secular state power 81 The third group a minority belief held by the Alevis is mainly represented by people who belong to the political left and presumed the Aleviness just as an outlook on the individual human life rather than a religious conviction by persistently renouncing the ties of Alevism with Twelver political branch of Shia Islam The followers of this congregation who later turned out to be the very stern defenders of Erdogan Cinar hold ritual unions of a religious character and have established cultural associations named after Pir Sultan Abdal as well According to their philosophy human being should enjoy a central role reminiscent of the doctrine of Khurramites and as illustrated by Hurufi phrase of God is Man quoted above in the context of the Trinity 81 The fourth citation needed who adopted some aspirations of Christian mysticism is more directed towards heterodox mysticism and stands closer to the Hajji Bektashi Brotherhood According to the philosophy developed by this congregation Christian mystic St Francis of Assisi and Hindu Mahatma Gandhi are supposedly considered better believers of God than many Muslims 81 Further information Ja fari Nusayrism Hurufism and ChinarismInfluences of other beliefs and sects on Alevism editSee also Ishikism nbsp Four Spiritual Stations in Bektashiyyah Sharia tariqa haqiqa and the fourth station marifa which is considered unseen is actually the center of the haqiqa region Marifa is the essence of all four stations Sufi elements in Alevism edit Further information Qalandariyya Qutb ad Din Haydar and Sufi metaphysics Despite this essentially Shi i orientation much of Aleviness mystical language is inspired by Sufi traditions For example the Alevi concept of God is derived from the philosophy of Ibn Arabi and involves a chain of emanation from God to spiritual man earthly man animals plants and minerals The goal of spiritual life is to follow this path in the reverse direction to unity with God or al Haqq Reality Truth From the highest perspective all is God see Sufi metaphysics Alevis admire al Hallaj a 10th century Sufi who was accused of blasphemy and subsequently executed in Baghdad for saying I am the Truth Ana al Haqq There is some tension between folk tradition Aleviness and the Bektashi Order which is a Sufi order founded on Alevi beliefs 82 In certain Turkish communities other Sufi orders the Halveti Jerrahi and some of the Rifaʽi have incorporated significant Alevi influence Wahdat al Mawjud edit Main article Wahdat al mawjud Bektashism places much emphasis on the concept of Wahdat al Mawjud وحدة الوجود the Unity of Being that was formulated by Ibn Arabi Bektashism is also heavily permeated with Shiite concepts such as the marked veneration of Ali the Twelve Imams and the ritual commemoration of Ashurah marking the Battle of Karbala The old Persian holiday of Nowruz is celebrated by Bektashis as Imam Ali s birthday In keeping with the central belief of Wahdat Al Mawjud the Bektashi see reality contained in Haqq Muhammad Ali a single unified entity Bektashi do not consider this a form of trinity There are many other practices and ceremonies that share similarity with other faiths such as a ritual meal muhabbet and yearly confession of sins to a baba magfirat i zunub مغفرة الذنوب Bektashis base their practices and rituals on their non orthodox and mystical interpretation and understanding of the Qur an and the prophetic practice Sunnah They have no written doctrine specific to them thus rules and rituals may differ depending on under whose influence one has been taught Bektashis generally revere Sufi mystics outside of their own order such as Ibn Arabi Al Ghazali and Jelalludin Rumi who are close in spirit to them Mysticism edit Further information Bektashism and Hurufism Bektashism is initiatic and members must traverse various levels or ranks as they progress along the spiritual path to the Reality First level members are called asiks عاشق They are those who while not having taken initiation into the order are nevertheless drawn to it Following initiation called nasip one becomes a muhip محب After some time as a muhip one can take further vows and become a dervish The next level above dervish is that of baba The baba lit father is considered to be the head of a tekke and qualified to give spiritual guidance irshad إرشاد Above the baba is the rank of halife baba or dede grandfather Traditionally there were twelve of these the most senior being the dedebaba great grandfather The dedebaba was considered to be the highest ranking authority in the Bektashi Order Traditionally the residence of the dedebaba was the Pir Evi The Saint s Home which was located in the shrine of Hajji Bektash Wali in the central Anatolian town of Hacibektas Solucakarahuyuk Non Islamic elements edit Further information Tengrism and Turkic mythology Alevism is indeed heavily influenced by old Turkic and shamanistic beliefs Concepts such as Odjak inclusive social roles for women musical performances various rituals celebrating the nature or the seasons like Hidirellez and some customs like the cult of ancestors trees and rocks are both observed in Alevism and Tengrism 83 84 See also editAshura Duzgin Bawo Religious humanism Shi a view of AliReferences edit Prochazka Eisl Gisela 5 April 2016 The Alevis Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 013 101 ISBN 978 0 19 934037 8 Retrieved 14 April 2023 Alevism Bektashism From Seljuks to Ottomans and Safavids A Historical Study Retrieved 14 April 2023 Yildirim Riza 2019 The Safavid Qizilbash Ecumene and the Formation of the Qizilbash Alevi Community in the Ottoman Empire c 1500 c 1700 Iranian Studies 52 3 4 449 483 doi 10 1080 00210862 2019 1646120 S2CID 204476564 Retrieved 14 April 2023 via www academia edu Mete Levent 2019 Buyruk und al Jafr Das Esoterische Wissen Alis Buyruk and al Jafr The esoteric knowledge of Ali Alevilik Bektasilik Arastirmalari Dergisi Forschungszeitschrift uber das Alevitentum und das Bektaschitentum Alevilik Bektasilik Arastirmalari Dergisi Research journal on Alevism and Bektashism in German 19 313 350 Retrieved 9 January 2024 Karakaya Stump Ayfer 2019 5 Mysticism and Imperial Politics The Safavids and the Making of the Kizilbash Milieu The Kizilbash Alevis in Ottoman Anatolia Sufism Politics and Community Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 220 255 doi 10 1515 9781474432702 012 ISBN 9781474432702 Karolewski Janina 2021 Adaptation of Buyruk Manuscripts to Impart Alevi Teachings Mehmet Yaman Dede and the Arapgir Cimen Buyrugu Education Materialised pp 465 496 doi 10 1515 9783110741124 023 ISBN 9783110741124 S2CID 237904256 Karakaya Stump Ayfer 2010 Documents and Buyruk Manuscripts in the Private Archives of Alevi Dede Families An Overview British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 37 3 273 286 doi 10 1080 13530194 2010 524437 JSTOR 23077031 S2CID 161466774 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 a b c d e f g Alevis World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Minority Rights Group 19 June 2015 Retrieved 14 April 2023 Karakaya Stump Ayfer 1 December 2019 The Kizilbash Alevis in Ottoman Anatolia Sufism Politics and Community doi 10 3366 edinburgh 9781474432689 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 4744 3268 9 S2CID 243158402 Gultekin Ahmet Kerim 2019 Kurdish Alevism Creating New Ways of Practicing the Religion PDF University of Leipzig p 10 The Alevis www guidetomuslimdiversity com au Archived from the original on 25 March 2017 Retrieved 27 July 2017 elewiti Wikiferheng in Kurdish 7 September 2020 retrieved 12 March 2023 a b c d e KINGSLEY PATRICK 22 July 2017 Turkey s Alevis a Muslim Minority Fear a Policy of Denying Their Existence The New York Times New York Times Retrieved 27 July 2017 Selmanpakoglu Ceren 11 February 2024 The formation of Alevi syncretism Thesis Bilkent University Markussen Hege Irene 2010 Alevi Theology from Shamanism to Humanism Alevis and Alevism pp 65 90 doi 10 31826 9781463225728 006 ISBN 978 1 4632 2572 8 Tee Caroline 29 January 2013 The Sufi Mystical Idiom in Alevi Asik Poetry Flexibility Adaptation and Meaning European Journal of Turkish Studies Social Sciences on Contemporary Turkey doi 10 4000 ejts 4683 ISSN 1773 0546 Bektashiyyah Religion Order Beliefs amp Community Britannica The Amalgamation of Two Religious Cultures The Conceptual and Social History of Alevi Bektashism 12 May 2022 a b c TR100 interaktif konda com tr Retrieved 13 October 2022 Kizil Nurbanu 31 December 2021 Govt signals action for Turkey s Alevi community amid obstacles Daily Sabah Retrieved 12 March 2023 a b Cagaptay Soner 17 April 2012 Are Syrian Alawites and Turkish Alevis the same CNN Archived from the original on 7 January 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Wakamatsu Hiroki 2013 Veneration of the Sacred or Regeneration of the Religious An Analysis of Saints and the Popular Beliefs of Kurdish Alevis 上智アジア学 31 Sophia University 12 a b Dressler Markus 2008 Alevis In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 a b c Hande Sozer Managing Invisibility Dissimulation and Identity Maintenance among Alevi Bulgarian Turks BRILL 2014 ISBN 978 9 004 27919 3 page 114 Tord Olsson Elisabeth Ozdalga Catharina Raudvere Alevi Identity Cultural Religious and Social Perspectives Tord Olsson Elisabeth Ozdalga Catharina Raudvere ISBN 978 1 135 79725 6 page 25 These and many other quotations may be found in John Shindeldecker 1998 Turkish Alevis Today Sahkulu Sultan Kulliyesi Vakfi ISBN 9789759444105 OCLC 1055857045 Ozbakir Akin Malatya Kale yoresi Alevi Bektasi inanclarinin tespit ve degerlendirilmesi MS thesis Sosyal Bilimler Enstitusu 2010 Aksu Ibrahim Differences amp Similarities Between Anatolian Alevis amp Arab Alawites Comparative Study on Beliefs and Practices www academia edu a b Alevi Hafizasini Tanimlamak Gecmis ve Tarih Arasinda 2016 n p Iletisim Yayinlari Tord Olsson Elisabeth Ozdalga Catharina Raudvere Alevi Identity Cultural Religious and Social Perspectives Tord Olsson Elisabeth Ozdalga Catharina Raudvere ISBN 978 1 135 79725 6 page 72 Handan Aksunger Jenseits des Schweigegebots Alevitische Migrantenselbstorganisationen und zivilgesellschaftliche Integration in Deutschland und den Niederlanden Waxmann Verlag 2013 ISBN 978 3 830 97883 1 page 83 84 German Polat Doc Dr Mizrap 2017 Yunus Emre Dusuncesinde Bir Egitim Modeli Olarak Insan i Kamil Konuya Ogretim Programlarinin Kulturel ve Felsefi Temelleri Baglaminda Bir Yaklasim Anadolu Universitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi 17 29 42 doi 10 18037 ausbd 415629 Darke Diana 2022 The Ottomans A Cultural Legacy Thames amp Hudson pp 86 88 ISBN 978 0 500 77753 4 Powell Russell 2016 Shariʿa in the Secular State Evolving Meanings of Islamic Jurisprudence in Routledge p 35 ISBN 9781317055693 Retrieved 27 July 2017 Roger M Savory ref Abdulbaki Golpinarli Encyclopaedia of Islam Kizil Bash Online Edition 2005 Also see Ozturk ibid pp 78 81 In the old days marrying a Sunni Yezide kusak cozmek was also accepted as an offense that led to the state of duskun See Alevi Buyruks Kristina Kehl Bordrogi reports this among the Tahtaci See her article The significance of musahiplik among the Alevis in Synchronistic Religious Communities in the Near East co edited by her with B Kellner Heinkele amp A Otter Beaujean Brill 1997 p 131 ff https www ekathimerini com society 1225686 the bektashis have stopped hiding a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Soileau Mark August 2012 Spreading the Sofra Sharing and Partaking in the Bektashi Ritual Meal History of Religions 52 1 1 30 doi 10 1086 665961 JSTOR 10 1086 665961 Retrieved 5 June 2021 Farooq Umar Turkey s Alevis beholden to politics www aljazeera com Krisztina Kehl Bodrogi 1988 Die Kizilbash Aleviten pp 182 204 See again The significance of musahiplik among the Alevis in Synchronistic Religious Communities in the Near East co edited by her with B Kellner Heinkele amp A Otter Beaujean Brill 1997 p 131 ff Religious practices in the Turco Iranian World 2005 Fieldhouse P 2017 Food Feasts and Faith An Encyclopedia of Food Culture in World Religions 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 42 ISBN 978 1 61069 412 4 Retrieved 11 August 2017 ALEVI amp BEKTASILERIN KUTSAL YERLERI TURBELER haberleri a b c شيعه لبنان زير سلطه عثماني ebookshia com in Arabic Sari Eren 2017 The Alevi Of Anatolia During the great Turkish expansion from Central Asia noktaekitap p 16 Retrieved 27 July 2017 a b Pir Sultan Abdal Monument and Festival memorializeturkey com Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 27 June 2014 a b Rana Birden Corbacioglu Zeynep Alemdar ALEVIS AND THE TURKISH STATE PDF turkishpolicy com Retrieved 27 June 2014 See Martin Stokes study Flows Capital Religious Diversity And The Alevi Struggle For Equality In Turkey Forbes Retrieved 1 January 2020 Miller Tracy ed October 2009 Mapping the Global Muslim Population A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World s Muslim Population Pew Research Center PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2009 Retrieved 8 October 2009 Nasr V The Shia Revival page 1 Norton W W amp Company Inc 2006 Aringberg Laanatza Marianne Alevis in Turkey Alawites in Syria Similarities and Differences In Alevi Identity Cultural Religious and Social Perspectives Edited by Tord Olsson Elisabeth Ozdalga and Catharina Raudvere 181 199 Richmond UK Curzon 1998 Gettleman Jeffrey 4 August 2012 Turkish Alawites Fear Spillover of Violence From Syria The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Jones Dorian 22 March 2012 Alevi Turks concerned for Alawi cousins in Syria Globalization DW Deutsche Welle Deutsche Welle Retrieved 28 July 2017 van Bruinessen Martin c 1995 Kurds Turks and the Alevi Revival in Turkey islam uga edu Archived from the original on 12 May 2014 Retrieved 31 July 2017 Karin Vorhoff 1995 Zwischen Glaube Nation und neuer Gemeinschaft Alevitische Identitat in der Turkei der Gegenwart pp 95 96 Turkey International Religious Freedom Report 2007 State gov 14 September 2007 Retrieved 9 August 2011 Daan Bauwens 18 February 2010 Turkey s Alevi strive for recognition Asia Times Online Archived from the original on 22 February 2010 Retrieved 9 August 2011 Massicard Elise 12 October 2012 The Alevis in Turkey and Europe Identity and Managing Territorial Diversity Routledge ISBN 9781136277986 Retrieved 5 June 2014 via googlebooks com a b Religion England and Wales Office of National Statistics Retrieved 30 November 2022 Gezik Erdal 2021 The Kurdish Alevis The Followers of the Path of Truth In Bozarslan Hamit ed The Cambridge History of the Kurds Cambridge University Press p 562 doi 10 1017 9781108623711 026 S2CID 235541104 Aksut Hamza 2009 Aleviler Turkiye Iran Irak Suriye Bulgaristan arastirma inceleme Yurt Kitap Yayin p 319 ISBN 9789759025618 Retrieved 31 July 2022 Hamza Aksut Hamza Aksut ile Alevi Ocaklari Uzerine Aleviligin Kokleri in Turkish Retrieved 1 August 2022 Govt signals action for Turkey s Alevi community amid obstacles www dailysabah com 31 December 2021 Retrieved 9 March 2022 Sabahat Akkiraz dan Alevi raporu haber sol org tr 14 December 2012 Retrieved 25 June 2014 From the introduction of Syncretistic Religious Communities in the Near East edited by her B Kellner Heinkele amp A Otter Beaujean Leiden Brill 1997 Structure and Function in Turkish Society Isis Press 2006 p 81 Mpozaninoy Tania 23 January 2011 TO BHMA Alebites oi agnwstoi syggeneis mas kosmos Tovima gr Retrieved 22 November 2012 Louie Kam 2008 The Cambridge Companion to Modern Chinese Culture Cambridge University Press p 114 ISBN 978 0521863223 Starr S Frederick 2004 Xinjiang China s Muslim Borderland China s Muslim Borderland Routledge p 303 ISBN 978 0765613189 Bader Alyssa Christine 9 May 2012 Mummy dearest questions of identity in modern and ancient Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region Alyssa Christine Bader Whitman College p31 Retrieved 19 November 2020 Johanson Lars 2001 Discoveries on the Turkic Linguistic Map PDF Stockholm Swedish Research Institute in Istanbul pp 21 22 Minahan James B 2014 Ethnic Groups of North East and Central Asia An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 14 15 ISBN 9781610690188 Alevitische Gemeinde Stadt Kassel Aleviten in Deutschland 16 September 2021 Yaman Ali Donmez Rasim Ozgur 2016 Creating cohesion from diversity through mobilization Locating the place of Alevi federations in Alevi collective identity in Europe Turk Kulturu ve Haci Bektas Veli Arastirma Dergisi 77 Ankara Haci Bayram Veli University 13 36 Kosulu Deniz 2013 The Alevi quest in Europe through the redefinition of the Alevi movement recognition and political participation a case study of the Fuaf in France Muslim Political Participation in Europe Edinburgh University Press pp 255 276 doi 10 3366 edinburgh 9780748646944 003 0013 ISBN 978 0 7486 4694 4 a b c d e Bilici F The Function of Alevi Bektashi Theology in Modern Turkey seminar Swedish Research Institute 1996 Ataseven I The Alevi Bektasi Legacy Problems of Acquisition and Explanation page 1 Coronet Books Inc 1997 The formation of Alevi syncretism Dressler Markus The Discovery of the Alevis Shamanism and the Need for Scholarly Accuracy Bibliography editGeneral introductions Dressler Markus 2008 Alevis In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 Engin Ismail amp Franz Erhard 2000 Aleviler Alewiten Cilt 1 Band Kimlik ve Tarih Identitat und Geschichte Hamburg Deutsches Orient Institut Mitteilungen Band 59 2000 ISBN 3 89173 059 4 Engin Ismail amp Franz Erhard 2001 Aleviler Alewiten Cilt 2 Band Inanc ve Gelenekler Glaube und Traditionen Hamburg Deutsches Orient Institut Mitteilungen Band 60 2001 ISBN 3 89173 061 6 Engin Ismail amp Franz Erhard 2001 Aleviler Alewiten Cilt 3 Band Siyaset ve Orgutler Politik und Organisationen Hamburg Deutsches Orient Institut Mitteilungen Band 61 2001 ISBN 3 89173 062 4 Kehl Bodrogi Krisztina 1992 Die Kizilbas Aleviten Untersuchungen uber eine esoterische Glaubensgemeinschaft in Anatolien Die Welt des Islams New Series Vol 32 No 1 Kitsikis Dimitri 1999 Multiculturalism in the Ottoman Empire The Alevi Religious and Cultural Community in P Savard amp B Vigezzi eds Multiculturalism and the History of International Relations Milano Edizioni Unicopli Kjeilen Tore undated Alevism Archived 4 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine in the online Encyclopedia of the Orient Shankland David 2003 The Alevis in Turkey The Emergence of a Secular Islamic Tradition Curzon Press Shindeldecker John 1996 Turkish Alevis Today Istanbul Sahkulu White Paul J amp Joost Jongerden eds 2003 Turkey s Alevi Enigma A Comprehensive Overview Leiden Brill Yaman Ali amp Aykan Erdemir 2006 Alevism Bektashism A Brief Introduction London England Alevi Cultural Centre amp Cem Evi ISBN 975 98065 3 3 Zeidan David 1999 The Alevi of Anatolia Middle East Review of International Affairs 3 4 Kurdish Alevis Bumke Peter 1979 Kizilbas Kurden in Dersim Tunceli Turkei Marginalitat und Haresie Anthropos 74 530 548 Gezik Erdal 2000 Etnik Politik Dinsel Sorunlar Baglaminda Alevi Kurtler Ankara Van Bruinessen Martin 1997 Aslini inkar eden haramzadedir The Debate on the Kurdish Ethnic Identity of the Kurdish Alevis In K Kehl Bodrogi B Kellner Heinkele amp A Otter Beaujean eds Syncretistic Religious Communities in the Near East Leiden Brill Van Bruinessen Martin 1996 Kurds Turks and the Alevi revival in Turkey Middle East Report No 200 pp 7 10 NB The online version is expanded from its original publication White Paul J 2003 The Debate on the Identity of Alevi Kurds In Paul J White Joost Jongerden eds Turkey s Alevi Enigma A Comprehensive Overview Leiden Brill pp 17 32 Alevi Bektashi history Birge John Kingsley 1937 The Bektashi order of dervishes London and Hartford Brown John P 1868 The Dervishes or Oriental Spiritualism Kucuk Hulya 2002 The Roles of the Bektashis in Turkey s National Struggle Leiden Brill Melikoff Irene 1998 Hadji Bektach Un mythe et ses avatars Genese et evolution du soufisme populaire en Turquie Leiden Islamic History and Civilization Studies and Texts volume 20 ISBN 90 04 10954 4 Shankland David 1994 Social Change and Culture Responses to Modernization in an Alevi Village in Anatolia In C N Hann ed When History Accelerates Essays on Rapid Social Change Complexity and Creativity London Athlone Press Yaman Ali undated Kizilbash Alevi Dedes Based on his MA thesis for Istanbul University Ghulat sects in general Halm H 1982 Die Islamische gnosis Die extreme Schia und die Alawiten Zurich Krisztina Kehl Bodrogi Krisztina amp Barbara Kellner Heinkele Anke Otter Beaujean eds 1997 Syncretistic Religious Communities in the Near East Leiden Brill pp 11 18 Moosa Matti 1988 Extremist Shiites The Ghulat Sects Syracuse University Press Van Bruinessen Martin 2005 Religious practices in the Turco Iranian world continuity and change French translation published as Les pratiques religieuses dans le monde turco iranien changements et continuites Cahiers d Etudes sur la Mediterranee Orientale et le Monde Turco Iranien no 39 40 101 121 Alevi Identity Erdemir Aykan 2005 Tradition and Modernity Alevis Ambiguous Terms and Turkey s Ambivalent Subjects Middle Eastern Studies 2005 vol 41 no 6 pp 937 951 Greve Martin and Ulas Ozdemir and Raoul Motika eds 2020 Aesthetic and Performative Dimensions of Alevi Cultural Heritage Ergon Verlag 215 pages ISBN 978 3956506406 Kocan Gurcan Oncu Ahmet 2004 Citizen Alevi in Turkey Beyond Confirmation and Denial Journal of Historical Sociology 17 4 pp 464 489 Olsson Tord amp Elizabeth Ozdalga Catharina Raudvere eds 1998 Alevi Identity Cultural Religious and Social Perspectives Istanbul Swedish Research Institute Stokes Martin 1996 Ritual Identity and the State An Alevi Shi a Cem Ceremony In Kirsten E Schulze et al eds Nationalism Minorities and Diasporas Identities and Rights in the Middle East pp 194 196 Vorhoff Karin 1995 Zwischen Glaube Nation und neuer Gemeinschaft Alevitische Identitat in der Turkei der Gegenwart Berlin Alevism in Europe Geaves Ron 2003 Religion and Ethnicity Community Formation in the British Alevi Community Koninklijke Brill NV 50 pp 52 70 Kosnick Kira 2004 Speaking in One s Own Voice Representational Strategies of Alevi Turkish Migrants on Open Access Television in Berlin Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30 5 pp 979 994 Massicard Elise 2003 Alevist Movements at Home and Abroad Mobilization Spaces and Disjunction New Perspective on Turkey 28 pp 163 188 Rigoni Isabelle 2003 Alevis in Europe A Narrow Path towards Visibility In Paul J White Joost Jongerden eds Turkey s Alevi Enigma A Comprehensive Overview Leiden Brill pp 159 173 Sokefeld Martin 2002 Alevi Dedes in the German Diaspora The Transformation of a Religious Institution Zeitschrift fur Ethnologie 127 pp 163 189 Sokefeld Martin 2004 Alevis in Germany and the Question of Integration paper presented at the Conference on the Integration of Immigrants from Turkey in Austria Germany and Holland Bogazici University Istanbul February 27 28 2004 Sokefeld Martin amp Suzanne Schwalgin 2000 Institutions and their Agents in Diaspora A Comparison of Armenians in Athens and Alevis in Germany Paper presented at the sixth European Association of Social Anthropologist Conference Krakau Thoma Venske Hanns 1990 The Religious Life of Muslim in Berlin In Thomas Gerholm Yngve Georg Lithman eds The New Islamic Presence in Western Europe New York Mansell pp 78 87 Wilpert Czarina 1990 Religion and Ethnicity Orientations Perceptions and Strategies among Turkish Alevi and Sunni Migrants in Berlin In Thomas Gerholm Yngve Georg Lithman eds The New Islamic Presence in Western Europe New York Mansell pp 88 106 Zirh Besim Can 2008 Euro Alevis From Gastarbeiter to Transnational Community In Anghel Gerharz Rescher and Salzbrunn eds The Making of World Society Perspectives from Transnational Research Transcript 103 130 Bibliographies Vorhoff Karin 1998 Academic and Journalistic Publications on the Alevi and Bektashi of Turkey In Tord Olsson Elizabeth Ozdalga Catharina Raudvere eds Alevi Identity Cultural Religious and Social Perspectives Istanbul Swedish Research Institute pp 23 50 Turkish language works Ata Kelime 2007 Alevilerin Ilk Siyasal Denemesi Turkiye Birlik Partisi 1966 1980 Ankara Kelime Yayinevi Aydin Ayhan 2008 Abidin Ozgunay Yazar Yayinci ve Cem Dergisi Kurucusu Istanbul Niyaz Yayinlari Balkiz Ali 1999 Sivas tan Sydney e Pir Sultan Ankara Italik Balkiz Ali 2002 Pir Sultan da Birlik Mucadelesi Hizir Pasalar a Yanit Ankara Italik Bilgol Hidir Ali 1996 Aleviler ve Canli Fotograflar Alev Yayinlari Coskun Zeki 1995 Aleviler Sunniler ve Oteki Sivas Istanbul Iletisim Yayinlari Dumont Paul 1997 Gunumuz Turkiye sinde Aleviligin Onemi icinde Aynayi Yuzume Ali Gorundu Gozume Yabanci Arastirmacilarin Gozuyle Alevilik editor Ilhan Cem Erseven Isntabul Ant 141 161 Engin Havva ve Engin Ismail 2004 Alevilik Istanbul Kitap Yayinevi Gul Zeynel 1995 Yol muyuz Yolcu muyuz Istanbul Can Yayinlari Gul Zeynel 1999 Dernekten Partiye Avrupa Alevi Orgutlenmesi Ankara Italik Guler Sabir 2008 Aleviligin Siyasal Orgutlenmesi Modernlesme Cozulme ve Turkiye Birlik Partisi Ankara Dipnot Irat Ali Murat 2008 Devletin Bektasi Hirkasi Devlet Aleviler ve Otekiler Istanbul Chiviyazilari Kaleli Lutfu 2000 1964 1997 Yillari Arasinda Alevi Orgutleri icinde Aleviler Alewiten Kimlik ve Tarih Indentitat und Geschichte editorler Ismail Engin ve Erhard Franz Hamburg Deutsches Orient Institut 223 241 Kaleli Lutfu 2000 Alevi Kimligi ve Alevi Orgutlenmeri Istanbul Can Yayinlari Kaplan Ismail 2000 Avrupa daki Alevi Orgutlenmesine Bakis icinde Aleviler Alewiten Kimlik ve Tarih Indentitat und Geschichte editorler Ismail Engin ve Erhard Franz Hamburg Deutsches Orient Institut 241 260 Kaplan Ismail 2009 Alevice Inancimiz ve Direncimiz Koln AABF Yayinlari Kocadag Burhan 1996 Alevi Bektasi Tarihi Istanbul Can Yayinlari Massicard Elise 2007 Alevi Hareketinin Siyasallasmasi Istanbul Iletisim Melikoff Irene 1993 Uyur Idik Uyardilar Istanbul Cem Yayinevi Okan Murat 2004 Turkiye de Alevilik Antropolojik Bir Yaklasim Ankara Imge Ozerol Suleyman 2009 Hasan Nedim Sahhuseyinoglu Ankara Urun Sahhuseyinoglu H Nedim 2001 Hizir Pasalar Bir Ihracin Perde Arkasi Ankara Italik Sahhuseyinoglu Nedim 1997 Pir Sultan Kultur Dernegi nin Demokrasi Laiklik ve Ozgurluk Mucadelesi Ankara PSAKD Yayinlari Sahhuseyinoglu Nedim 2001 Alevi Orgutlerinin Tarihsel Sureci Ankara Italik Salman Meral 2006 Muze Duvarlarina Sigmayan Dergah Alevi Bektasi Kimliginin Kurulus Surecinde Haci Bektas Veli Anma Gorenleri Ankara Kalan Sarac Necdet 2010 Alevilerin Siyasal Tarihi Istanbul Cem Sener Cemal ve Miyase Ilknur 1995 Seriat ve Alevilik Kirklar Meclisi nden Gunumuze Alevi Orgutlenmesi Istanbul Ant Tosun Halis 2002 Alevi Kimligiyle Yasamak Istanbul Can Yayinlari Vergin Nur 2000 1981 Din Toplum ve Siyasal Sistem Istanbul Baglam Yaman Ali 2000 Anadolu Aleviligi nde Ocak Sistemi Ve Dedelik Kurumu Alevi Bektasi Zirh Besim Can 2005 Avro Aleviler Ziyaretci Iscilikten Ulus asiri Topluluga Kirkbudak 2 31 58 Zirh Besim Can 2006 Avrupa Alevi Konfederasyonu Turgut Oker ile Gorusme Kirkbudak 2 51 71 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alevism Official Alevi Bektashi Order of Derwishes website in English A Sufi Metamorphosis Imam Ali History of Sufism Islamic Mysticism and the importance of Ali Alevis in English Alevi Bektasi Research Site in Turkish Semah from a TV show YouTube Semah several samples YouTube Portals nbsp Turkey nbsp Religion nbsp Islam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alevism amp oldid 1220092722, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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