Bakhchysarai Hıdırllez Celebration
The annual Hıdırllez (Hıdırellez) gathering in Bakhchysarai — a spring festival on May 5–6 merging the prophets Khidir and Ilyas with pre-Islamic seasonal rites — is the largest recurring Crimean Tatar public celebration. Mass gatherings feature ethnic cuisine pavilions, kuresh wrestling, folk crafts exhibitions, and prayers for harvest. Called Tepreş in the Dobruja diaspora, it now operates under state management in occupied Crimea, with the risk that living ritual practice is presented as ethnic heritage for Russian domestic tourists. Anchor modes: living_ritual; signal | Search hooks: Bakhchysarai Hıdırllez; Khidirlez spring celebration; kuresh wrestling; ethnic cuisine pavilion; Tepreş Dobruja; May 5-6 gathering
Join the annual May 5–6 Hıdırllez gathering in Bakhchysarai with ethnic cuisine, kuresh wrestling competitions, folk crafts exhibitions by blacksmiths, potters, and embroiderers, and prayers for harvest and prosperity
Juma-Jami Mosque
Designed by Mimar Sinan (1552–1564) in Yevpatoria (Kezlev), this Friday Mosque hosted the oath-taking ceremony for Crimean Khans at their enthronement — linking Islamic liturgical authority to sovereign political power. Still used for Friday congregational prayer, it now sits at the center of a competing-authority dispute between the original DUMK Muftiate and the occupation-aligned 'traditional Islam' structure, meaning Kurban Bayram and Oraza Bayram dates may differ depending on which institutional calendar is followed. Anchor modes: living_ritual; material_layer | Search hooks: Juma-Jami Mosque; Yevpatoria Friday Mosque; Mimar Sinan design; Khan enthronement ceremony; Kezlev mosque; Kurban Bayram observance
See the Ottoman-era mosque with 35-metre minarets designed by Mimar Sinan, observe Friday congregational prayers, note the competing religious authority signs or announcements for Islamic festival dates
Mejlis Building
The building in Simferopol (Aqmescit in Tatar) that housed the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People — the representative body founded in 1991 that coordinated political and cultural life including Sürgünlik commemorations and support for festival revival. Seized by occupation authorities and handed to a music school after the Mejlis was banned in April 2016, it is now a physical trace of institutional suppression: the coordinator of Crimean Tatar festival and memorial life removed, making public observances vulnerable to restriction. Anchor modes: custodian; signal | Search hooks: Mejlis Building; Simferopol Aqmescit; Crimean Tatar self-governance; Kurultai assembly; banned institution 2016; seized cultural center
See the building that housed the Mejlis — now occupied by a music school; note the contrast between its current use and its former role as the center of Crimean Tatar self-governance and cultural coordination
Sürgünlik Memorial Yevpatoria
Memorial to the 1944 deportation of Crimean Tatars in Yevpatoria, one of the physical anchors for the annual May 18 Sürgünlik commemoration — a new festival-memorial form (recognized in Ukraine as the Day of Remembrance for the Victims of the Genocide of the Crimean Tatar People) that has no pre-1944 precedent but now structures the Crimean Tatar ritual year. Under occupation, commemorations here have been restricted, making the act of remembrance itself a site of political contestation. Anchor modes: living_ritual; material_layer | Search hooks: Sürgünlik Memorial Yevpatoria; May 18 deportation remembrance; candle-lighting ceremony; genocide memorial Crimea; Crimean Tatar deportation monument; Sürgün commemoration
Visit the deportation memorial in Yevpatoria; observe or attend the annual May 18 Sürgünlik commemoration with candle-lighting ceremonies (note: commemorations may be restricted under occupation)