Turkey's Hidrellez spring festival added to UNESCO list

Culture Ministry says festival joins more than dozen Turkish cultural practices

Turkey's Hidrellez spring festival added to UNESCO list

The Turkish spring festival of Hidrellez has been added to the UNESCO list of “intangible cultural heritage”, the Culture Ministry said Thursday.

In a statement, the ministry said that the celebration had been added at a UNESCO meeting in South Korea.

Turkish communities around the world celebrate Hidrellez on May 6 while Christians in the Balkans mark it as St George’s day on April 23.

The roots of the celebration pre-date Islam or Christianity.

According to the Culture Ministry website, some theories say Hidrellez stemmed from Mesopotamian and Anatolian cultures with others claiming it came from the Turkic peoples of central Asia.

Across the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East, different traditions and rituals have developed, many focused on bringing good luck with the arrival of spring.

While differing greatly from country to country, the event is often marked by the cleaning of homes and clothes, feasting or ceremonies held near open water or shrines.

Among the Roma community in Turkey’s northwestern Canakkale province, dancers in colorful clothing jump over bonfires to seek good health.

UNESCO has listed at least 14 cultural practices found in Turkey, according to the ministry. These include the dance of the Mevlana whirling dervishes, Karagoz shadow plays, oil-wrestling at Kirkpinar and the Turkish coffee.

On Wednesday, UNESCO listed the “whistled language” of northern Turkey’s Black Sea region as being in need of urgent safeguarding.