Every Friday dervishes gather an hour before sunset around some of the big mosques in Khartoum and Omdurman. A circle is formed and the ritual begins.
The ceremony starts with the Madeeh – chanting words of gratitude to the Prophet Mohammed. The audience interacts with the chanters, dancing to the rhythms of the percussion instruments. Then comes the Zikr, in which the dervishes repeat the word ‘Allah’ many times.
The dervishes start whirling around inside the circle. With the music, the fragrance of burning frankincense, the endless repetition of religious chants, and the dizziness, they go into a state of trance. According to ancient belief, Sufism is about the purification of the soul in pursuit of inner peace.
The whirling dance came from the Mevlevi Order in Turkey, and is just one of the physical methods used to try to reach religious ecstasy. While the more well known Mevlevi dervishes wear white robes, Sudanese dervishes are often dressed in green and red.
The ceremony is not all about devotional chanting, it is also a social and communal gathering where food is served for the needy. Growing hair is a common practice among the dervishes, some keep it in dreadlocks while others just let it loose.
Although Sudan is in many ways a male-dominated society, women find themselves a place in the crowd. They gather in one corner wearing bright, colourful robes. At the close of the ceremony, just before sunset, one of the dervishes walks round the gathered audience with frankincense – which is considered to be a type of blessing to the faithful.
About Marco Marcone
I have been photographing since I was 12, when my father gifted me my first camera. Since then, I never stopped looking at the world from behind the camera’s lens. My interest for what I saw around me grew day by day, together with my passion for traveling, which brought me to documentary and reportage photography. I photograph in order to tell stories as a form of emotional and aesthetic research. The perpetual search for light, color, and the perfect moment, but mostly the interaction with the people I meet, encourage me to share and help me understand human nature. For me this is as vital as the air that I breathe. Since 2022, I have been part of DoogReporter. [Official Website]