Bektashi
Bektashi
was an order of dervishes, largely held to be of the
Shia
branch of the
Muslim faith
founded, according to tradition, by Hajji Bektash Wali of Khorasan, in present-day
Iran, in the
thirteenth
century and given definitive form by Balim, a
sultan
of the
Ottoman
Empire in the
sixteenth
century. The order was independent from orthodox
Islam
and it included traditional folk elements in its doctrines and rituals. The order
grew out of saint-veneration and the system of convents into a syncretistic unity,
combining elements from many sources, vulgar, heterodox, and esoteric; ranging
from the popular cults of central
Asia
and
Anatolia, both
Turkish
and Christian Rumi, to the doctrines of the Hurufis. The Bektashis composed some
beautiful
Sufi poetry. Bektashis
continue to exist in the
Balkans,
primarily in
Albania,
where their chief
monastery
was at
Tirana, though the
order was officially disestablished in
1925
by
Mustafa Kemal
Atatürk.