Dede (religious figure)

Further information: Alevism
Further information: Ishikism

A dede is a socio-religious leader in the islamic Alevi and non-islamic Ishikis community. The institution of dede is the most important of all the institutions integral to the social and religious organization of the Anatolian Alevis. Although much weakened as a result of the socio-economic transformation experienced in Anatolia towards the end of the nineteenth century, and particularly due to accelerated migration from the rural to the urban areas after the foundation of the Republic of Turkey, it played a primary role in the survival of Alevism until today.

The institution of dedes is based on a three tiered hierarchy:

  1. Murshid
  2. Pir
  3. Rehber

In some regions this hierarchy is modified in such a way that the Pir and Murshid change places. This is exclusively a functional hierarchy, as all involved come from a dede family. They fulfill functions that are complementary in nature, and would be meaningless in isolation from each other. The dede families, all of them called ocakzâdes, have distributed these duties among themselves.

An Alevis dede focusses on the islamic mystic teachings of the Twelve Imams, the Buyruks (mainly the Imam Câfer-i Sadık Buyruğu) and Haji Bektash Veli and an Ishikis dede focusses more on esotericism beliefs and believe that traditions and ceremonies in Alevism are pre-islamic coming from the Hittites and Sumerinns religions claiming that it comes from them originally and rejects many teachings from Islam.

Qualifications

According to the books of the Buyruk which include the basic principles of the Alevi faith, and the traditions that survive among the Alevis, a dede must have the following qualifications:[1]

Functions

The main functions of the dedes can be summarized as follows:

Legal Functions

For Alevis, “YOL” (path) is a very important concept. The pedigrees of the dedes consistently emphasize this by saying “Yol cümleden uludur” [the Path is the most exalted of all].[3] What is important is the “Yol” and not the personal desires and needs of an individual Alevi. All the latter are possible only in conformity with the former. Otherwise, the institution of düşkün would be activated. In other words, an Alevi would become a düşkün if he tries to satisfy his desires and needs without regard for the “YOL” (path). As Prof. Yusuf Ziya Yörükan noted “…Dede declares one a "düşkün" by saying to him "may your face be darkened". Any more that person is deprived of the law of men….”[4]

The following are major crimes that lead one to the state of düşkün:[5]

References

  1. On the issue of the qualifications and functions of dedes, Peter J. Bumke gives valuable information. Bumke, ibid, pp. 18-21
  2. Officially today there is no province called Dersim. For centuries, Dersim maintained a kind of autonomy under the leadership of the tribal chiefs, and covers a region that includes the provinces of Erzincan, Tunceli and parts of Sivas. In 1937, the name of Dersim was changed to Tunceli.
  3. This and similar expressions are frequently encountered in the secere of the Ocak of Ali Abbas.
  4. Yusuf Ziya, “Tahtacılar, Tahtacılarda Dini ve Sırri hayat’, DARÜLFÜNUN İLAHİYAT FAKÜLTESİ MECMUASI, year: 4, no: 15, May 1930, p. 75
  5. Also see, Öztürk, Yaşar Nuri, ibid, pp. 78-81. In the old days, marrying a Sünni [Yezide kuşak çözmek] was also accepted as an offense that led to the state of "düşkün". See Alevi Buyruks.
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