Discover a hidden lodge in the heart of Istanbul
Behind the narrow streets of Beyoğlu, just sixteen minutes from the Galata Tower, sits a place most guidebooks miss. Kasımpaşa Mevlevihanesi is the third Mevlevi lodge ever built in Istanbul. Founded in the 1620s by Sheikh Abdullah Dede, restored under Sultan Mahmud II, closed during the 1925 dervish lodge prohibition, and reopened in our generation, carefully and faithfully.
Walk inside and you understand what reviewers mean when they call it "an oasis in the heart of Istanbul." Most travelers leave noting how completely the city's noise disappears the moment the courtyard gate closes behind them.
A living ritual, not a tourist show
Every Wednesday, Friday and Sunday at 17:00, the semâhane (ceremony hall) opens its doors. The whirling dervishes ceremony, properly called Mukabele, has been practiced almost without interruption for 800 years. UNESCO listed it as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2008.
The ceremony begins with a brief introduction by our resident sheikh, given in both Turkish and English. You will learn what the dervishes' robes signify, why they incline their heads, why one hand reaches up while the other reaches down, and what the four "salams" (movements) of the ceremony represent. Then live Sufi music begins, the dervishes enter the hall, and the four salams unfold.
This is not a staged performance. Reviewers consistently describe the venue as "not touristy", with no theatrical lighting, no applause, and a quiet, reverent atmosphere.
Exhibitions and traditional art workshops
Before and after the ceremony you have access to the Tekke Artifacts Exhibition and the Dervish Trousseau Museum on site. Upstairs, the calligraphy and traditional arts gallery displays musical instruments, centuries old manuscripts, and personal items belonging to the lodge's former dervishes.
If you would like to go deeper, optional workshops in Ebru (paper marbling), Hüsn-i Hat (Islamic calligraphy), miniature painting and felt making are available. They are taught using the same master to student methods passed down through generations of mevlevihane artisans. Workshops require a separate booking.
Who runs this lodge
Kasımpaşa Mevlevihanesi is operated by the İnsan ve İrfan Foundation, a non profit dedicated to preserving Istanbul's Sufi heritage. Our priority is faithful continuation of the tradition, not commercial spectacle.