With the American economy in
shambles, Europe imploding, and the Middle East in chaos, convincing Americans
that they should pay attention to a Turkish preacher named Fethullah Gülen is
an exceedingly hard sell. Many Americans have never heard of him, and if they
have, he sounds like the least of their worries. According to his website, he
is an “authoritative mainstream Turkish Muslim scholar, thinker, author, poet,
opinion leader and educational activist who supports interfaith and
intercultural dialogue, science, democracy and spirituality and opposes
violence and turning religion into a political ideology.” The website adds that
“by some estimates, several hundred educational organizations such as K–12
schools, universities, and language schools have been established around the
world inspired by Fethullah Gülen.” The site notes, too, that Gülen was “the
first Muslim scholar to publicly condemn the attacks of 9/11.” It also
celebrates his modesty.
Yet there is a bit more to the story. Gülen is a powerful business figure
in Turkey and—to put it mildly—a controversial one. He is also an increasingly
influential businessman globally. There are somewhere between 3 million and 6
million Gülen followers—or, to use the term they prefer, people who are
“inspired” by him. Sources vary widely in their estimates of the worth of the
institutions “inspired” by Gülen, which exist in every populated continent, but
those based on American court records have ranged from $20 billion to $50
billion. Most interesting, from the American point of view, is that Gülen lives
in Pennsylvania, in the Poconos. He is, among other things, a major player in
the world of American charter schools—though he claims to have no power over
them; they’re just greatly inspired, he says.
Even if it were only for these reasons, you might want to know more about
Gülen, especially because the few commentators who do write about him generally
mischaracterize him, whether they call him a “radical Islamist” or a “liberal
Muslim.” The truth is much more complicated—to the extent that anyone
understands it.
To begin to understand Gülen,
you must start with the history of the Nurcu movement. Said Nursî (1878–1960),
a Sunni Muslim in the Sufi tradition, was one of the great charismatic
religious personalities of the late Ottoman Caliphate and early Turkish
Republic. His Risale-i Nur,
disdained and sometimes banned by the Republic, nevertheless became the basis
for the formation of “reading circles”—geographically dispersed communities the
size of small towns that gathered to read, discuss, and internalize the text
and to duplicate it when it was banned. Nurcus tend to say, roughly, that theRisale-i Nur is distilled from
the Koran; non-Nurcus often find the claim inappropriate or arrogant.
These reading circles gradually spread through Anatolia. Hakan Yavuz, a
Turkish political scientist at the University of Utah, calls the Nurcu movement
“a resistance movement to the ongoing Kemalist modernization process.” But it
is also “forward-looking,” Yavuz says, a “conceptual framework for a people
undergoing the transformation from a confessional community (Gemeinschaft) to a secular national
society (Gesellschaft). . . .
Folk Islamic concepts and practices are redefined and revived to establish new
solidarity networks and everyday-life strategies for coping with new
conditions.” To call this movement “fundamentalist” or “radical” is to empty
both terms of meaning. It is equally silly to dismiss it as theologically
primitive. I confess that I have not read all 6,000 pages of the Risale-i Nur, but I have read enough
to be convinced that Nursî is a fairly sophisticated thinker.
Gülen’s movement, or cemaat,
arose from roughly a dozen neo-Nur reading circles. Gülen was born in 1941 in a
village near Erzurum, the eastern frontier of what is now the Turkish Republic.
This territory was bitterly contested by the Russian, Persian, and Ottoman
empires and gave rise to interpretations of Islam strongly infused with Turkish
nationalism: when nothing but the Turkish state stands between you and the
Russians, you become a Turkish nationalist, fast. Likewise, contrary to a
common misconception among Americans who view the Islamic world as monolithic,
Gülenists do notconsider
Persians their friends.
Two notable points about Gülen’s philosophy. First, he strongly dissuades
his followers from tebliğ,
or open proselytism. He urges them instead to practice temsil—living an Islamic way of life
at all times, setting a good example, and embodying their ideals in their way
of life. From what I have seen in Turkey, the embodiment of these ideals
involves good manners, hard work, and the funding of many charities. It also
involves a highly segregated role for women. I would not want to live in the
segregated world that they find acceptable here; neither, I suspect, would the
Western sociologists who have enthusiastically described the Gülen movement as
analogous, say, to contemporary Southern Baptists or German Calvinists.
Second, Gülen holds (publicly, at any rate) that Muslims and non-Muslims
once lived in peace because the Ottoman Turks established an environment of
tolerance. To restore this peaceful coexistence worldwide, he says, Turks
should become world leaders in promoting tolerance among religions—and Turks
following his teachings should become world leaders.
Gülen’s detractors, however, inevitably point to a speech of his that
surfaced in a video in 1999:
You must move in the arteries of the system without anyone noticing your
existence until you reach all the power centers. . . . Until the conditions are
ripe, they [the followers] must continue like this. If they do something
prematurely, the world will crush our heads, and Muslims will suffer
everywhere, like in the tragedies in Algeria, like in 1982 [in] Syria, . . .
like in the yearly disasters and tragedies in Egypt. . . . The time is not yet
right. You must wait for the time when you are complete and conditions are
ripe, until we can shoulder the entire world and carry it. . . . You must wait
until such time as you have gotten all the state power, until you have brought
to your side all the power of the constitutional institutions in Turkey . . . .
Now, I have expressed my feelings and thoughts to you all—in confidence . . .
trusting your loyalty and secrecy. I know that when you leave here, [just] as
you discard your empty juice boxes, you must discard the thoughts and the
feelings that I expressed here.
By this point, Gülen had decamped from Turkey to the United States for
medical treatment. Nonetheless, in 2000, he was tried in absentia by a state
security court for endeavoring to replace Turkey’s secular government with an
Islamic one; the indictment alleged that his movement had attempted to
infiltrate Turkey’s military schools. His followers say that the video was
altered to incriminate him, but they have never produced the putatively
innocuous original videotape. After years of legal wrangling, Gülen was
acquitted in 2008.
Gülen’s cemaat is by far the strongest
Nurcu group in Turkey, described by many as Turkey’s third power, alongside
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s increasingly authoritarian Justice and
Development Party (known as the AKP, its initials in Turkish) and the military.
The structure and organization of the cemaat are a subject of controversy. Members tend to be
evasive not only about their relationship to Gülen but about the very existence
of the cemaat; of late,
some have urged Turks to use the word camia in its place. What’s the difference? Not much. Camia conveys looser ties; cemaat can mean “congregation,”
whereas a camia is
more like a circle. But the word cemaat has
become so fraught with sinister overtones that rebranding was in order. Gülen
himself calls his movement Hizmet,
or service.
The movement’s supporters say that its structure is informal—that being
“inspired” by Gülen is akin to being “inspired” by Mother Teresa. Critics,
including many people who have left the movement, observe that its
organizational structure is strict, hierarchical, and undemocratic. Gülen
(known to his followers as Hocaefendi,
or “master teacher”) is the sole leader, they say, and each community is led by abis, or elder brothers, who are
privy to only a limited amount of information. Sociologist Berna Turam has
argued that the abis make
strong suggestions about, and perhaps dictate, whom members should marry. Even
if prospective spouses are not within the cemaat, the cemaat should
benefit from them; a spouse from a rich or powerful family would be an asset,
for example. This sounds plausible: we often see this approach to marriage in
societies with weak institutions and low social trust, and Turkey is certainly
such a society.
The movement, according to researchers such as Yavuz, has three coordinated
tiers: businessmen, journalists, and teachers. The first tier, the so-called
Anatolian bourgeoisie, provides financial support: it funds private high
schools, universities, colleges, dormitories, summer camps, and foundations
around the world. The journalists of the second tier own one of the leading
Turkish dailies, Zaman;
its English-language counterpart, Today’s
Zaman (which is often not a faithful translation); the Turkish
television station STV; the Cihan news service; many magazines and academic
journals; several lesser dailies and TV channels; and many Internet-only news
outlets. Finally, teachers operate the schools.
An e-mail message released by WikiLeaks and written by Reva Bahalla, an
employee of the private intelligence company Stratfor, details the first two
tiers. The e-mail describes “hanging out with hardcore Gülenists” in Istanbul.
It begins with a visit to the headquarters of Zaman:
The way they represent their agenda is that this is about democratization
in Turkey, human rights, world peace, etc. The guy was actually quoting Western
liberal philosophers trying to show how much in common they have with them in
respect for these democratic values, and this is what’s essential for Turkey’s
candidacy in the EU. The irony, they claim, is that people think because
they’re Islamist, they’re fundamentalist and not modern, whereas the
authoritarians (in their view) i.e. the military, are the ones who are seen in
the West as modern. . . . (my note—what Emre and I noticed is that in all our
meetings with Gülenists, they recited almost the same lines verbatim. . . .)
The next day, Emre and I visited a major Gülenist organization that puts
together these massive conferences all over the world to promote their agenda,
raise funds, recruits, etc. Their office is in a very expensive part of
Istanbul. They’ve got the best facilities, this beautiful theater system. In
short, they’ve got money. Now you have to ask yourself, where is the money
coming from? . . . Their funding comes mainly from co-opting the Anatolian
business class. . . .
After getting a very long tour of the entire building, top to bottom, they
sat us down for a Gülen propaganda film in their theater. . . . The Gülen guy
is so overcome by the speech shown in the video by Fethullah Gülen, that he
starts crying. Meanwhile I’m trying really hard not to laugh.
Well, it’s funny unless you have to live here.
Wherever the movement establishes itself, it seems to follow a particular
pattern. Sociologist Jonathan Lacey has studied its activities in Ireland,
where the Gülen-inspired Turkish-Irish Educational and Cultural Society (TIECS)
organizes one-week trips to Turkey for non-Turkish people:
I established that these trips are subsidized by businessmen, who are
members of the Gülen Community. Members of TIECS claim that these trips are
subsidized in order to promote intercultural dialogue. However, given the fact
that the Gülen Community is actively engaged in trade as well as education in
Central Asia, I proposed that these businessmen subsidize these trips, at least
partly, to increase trade between Ireland and Turkey. Another possibility for
these subsidies may lie in the hope of promoting a positive impression of
Turkey in Europe and thereby securing entry into the European Union.
French researcher Bayram Balcı, who is of Turkish origin, describes
something similar in the movement’s activities in Central Asia:
Businessmen from a particular city in Turkey, for example Bursa, will
decide to concentrate their efforts on a particular Central Asian city, for
example Tashkent. Nurcu investment will then become important in Tashkent, and
a kind of twinning . . . between the two cities results. Nurcu group
members—whom we can consider as missionaries—are sent by the movement with the
aim of making contact with important companies, bureaucrats and personalities
in order to appraise local needs. They then invite some of these important
personalities to Turkey. . . . Nurcu organizations receive them and show them
the private schools and foundations of the cemaat, without ever mentioning this word.
Whether one should admire the cemaat or be disturbed by it
depends on the answer to this question: What is it after? And to arrive at that
answer, we should explore two things about it that are known to be troubling.
First, there is evidence that the cemaat is
internally authoritarian, even cultlike. Ilhan Tanır, a Turkish journalist who
was in the cemaat but
who left it, has expressed particular concern about the blind obedience
demanded of its members:
Confusing the real world with the cosmic one, the movement sees itself many
times as self-righteous and blessed in every occasion, and surrounded with
miracles. Consequently, when hearing any criticism against its wishes and work,
it equates suspicious inquirers either with iniquity or having ulterior
motives. “Itaat,” or obedience,
therefore becomes the first and the most important characteristic of a “good”
and “trusted” member. . . . Living in such an environment for so long, many of
these people simply become afraid to face the outside or are too weak to live
in a real world.
Moreover, Tanır holds, the cemaat believes
that its cosmic mission “justifies any conduct to achieve its ends at any
cost.”
In 2008, the Dutch government investigated the movement’s activities in the
Netherlands. Ella Vogelaar, the country’s minister for housing, communities,
and integration, warned that “in general terms, when an organization calls for
turning away from society, this is at odds with the objectives of integration.”
It was, she noted, incumbent upon the government to “keep sharp watch over
people and organizations that systematically incite anti-integrative behavior,
for this can also be a breeding ground for radicalization.” Testifying about
one of the schools in the investigation, a former member of the movement called
it a “sect with a groupthink outside of which these students cannot [reason]”:
After years living in the boarding school it is psychologically impossible
to pull yourself away; you get guilt feelings. Furthermore, it forces the
students to live, think and do as the Big Brothers [the abis] instruct them to. Furthermore,
through psychological pressure, these students are told which choice of career
is the best they can make for the sake of high ideals. . . . Another very bad
aspect is that students no longer respect their parents and they do not listen
if the parents do not live by the standards imposed by the group; they are
psychologically distanced from their parents; here you have your little
soldiers that march only to the orders of their abis. The abis are
obliged to obey the provincial leaders, who in turn must obey the national
leaders, who in turn obey Fethullah Gülen.
Following the investigation, the Dutch government, presumably concluding
that the Gülen schools did indeed promote “anti-integrative behavior,” reduced
their public funding.
The belief that the movement commands or inspires blind obedience is not
confined to those who have left it—its spokesmen are proud of it. In 2010,
American journalist Suzy Hansen, writing for The New Republic, visited the Golden Generation Worship and
Retreat Center in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania, where Gülen lives. The president
of the facility, Bekir Aksoy, explained to her that “our people do not
complain. . . . They obey commands completely. . . . Let me put it this way. If
a man with a Ph.D. and a career came to see Hocaefendi, and Hocaefendi told him
it might be a good idea to build a village on the North Pole, that man with a
Ph.D. would be back the next morning with a suitcase.”
The second troubling fact about
the cemaat’s activities is
that the Turkish media organizations associated with it are clearly pursuing an
agenda at odds with the movement’s publicly stated ideals. The English version
of Zaman is often
significantly different from the Turkish one. Remarks about enemies of Islam,
perfidious Armenians, and Mossad plots are edited out of the English version,
as are other comments that sound incompatible with the message of intercultural
tolerance. For example, Today’s
Zaman last year published Gülen’s criticism of the government for
failing to solve long-standing issues over the rights of Kurds, but omitted his
ambiguous prayer: “Knock their homes upside down, destroy their unity, reduce
their homes to ashes, may their homes be filled with weeping and supplications,
burn and cut off their roots, and bring their affairs to an end.” Gülen’s
supporters will insist that he was referring only to the Kurdistan Workers’
Party, or PKK, which the United States quite properly considers a terrorist
group. But many ethnically Kurdish citizens of Turkey heard this as a call for
genocide and were terrified by it.
Or consider Gülen’s reasonable rebuttal, printed in Today’s Zaman, to the common charge
that his followers have infiltrated the organs of the state: “To urge fellow
citizens to seek employment at state institutions is not called infiltration.
Both the people urged and these institutions belong to the same country. . . .
It is a right for them to be employed in state posts.” Those ellipses indicate
something from the Turkish-language Zaman that
has been omitted from the translation. What has been omitted is “Kastedilen manadaki sızmayı belli bir
dönemde bu milletten olmayanlar yaptılar,” meaning roughly that in the
past, the state was infiltrated—by
those who “weren’t part of this nation.” Those who know Turkey will immediately
recognize the statement as part of a common understanding of history in which
infiltration explains the state’s actions as far back as the nineteenth
century. The clear intimation is that the state was once infiltrated by
non-Muslims or people only pretending to be Muslim—among them Atatürk, of
course. (Though expatriates in Turkey read Today’s Zaman for roughly the reasons that Kremlinologists
once read Pravda, I should
note that it seems to be influential among foreign observers and is apparently
beloved of Anne-Marie Slaughter, recently the State Department’s director of
policy planning.)
But to understand the strongest case against the Gülen media empire, we
must explore some recent Turkish history. In June 2007, police discovered a
crate of grenades in an Istanbul slum. Investigators claimed that they belonged
to a shadowy clique of conspirators called Ergenekon. The organization was
supposedly an outgrowth of the so-called Deep State—a secret coalition of
high-level figures in the military, the intelligence services, the judiciary,
and organized crime, which surely existed at one point and doubtless still
does. Ergenekon allegedly planned to stage a series of terrorist attacks
throughout Turkey and use the ensuing chaos as the pretext for a military coup.
Since the day this news broke, thousands of Turks have been arrested by the
AKP-led government, including military officers, academics, theologians, and
journalists. In 2009, a new round of mass arrests began, targeting Kurds and
leftists, as well as their attorneys. Journalists who witness these trials come
away shocked, unable to believe the absurdity of the spectacle. I’ve watched a
presiding judge, for example, ask a defendant why—if the evidence against him
had been forged, as the defendant claimed—he had not caught the forger. Beyond
the irrelevance of the question (that isn’t the job of the accused), there was
the obvious fact that the defendant had been in a prison cell since his arrest
and thus hardly in a position to do freelance police work.
It’s impossible not to conclude that something is rotten in the way the
judicial process works in these cases, which until recently were under the
control of the so-called Special Authority Courts. These were sold to the
public as an advance upon Turkey’s loathed military courts, but as far as I can
tell, they have represented no great improvement in the justice system. You
don’t have to be a forensic specialist to see this; you only have to spend 15
minutes looking at the quality of the evidence upon which they rely. The most
famous example involves the admission as evidence of coup plans that refer to
entities that did not yet exist in the year that they were allegedly drafted;
but anyone who wants other examples is spoiled for choice.
Yet the Gülenist media have cheered on these arrests and mass
trials—representing them as the cleansing of the Deep State; describing them as
a move against “terrorist networks”; calling those who question the cases’
legal standards darbeci,
or coup-mongers; and failing to retract or correct misleading claims in their
reporting. In other respects, by the way, journalists employed by the
Gülen-“inspired” media are often better reporters than those employed by
Turkey’s older media, so it’s not convincing to suggest that they’re just dumb
and sloppy. They are careful and professional when they want to be. For these trials,
they apparently don’t want to be.
Now to America. Gülen lives in
the United States, and he has received praise and support from high-level
figures in the American government. Bill Clinton and James Baker have delivered
encomiums to his contributions to world peace, for instance, and President
Obama has made an admiring visit to the Gülen-inspired Pinnacle School in
Washington, D.C. Former CIA officer Graham Fuller—also former vice chairman of
the National Intelligence Council and the author of The Future of Political Islam—vouched
for Gülen personally in his green-card application process, as did former CIA
officer George Fidas and former ambassador to Turkey Morton Abramowitz.
All this support fuels conspiracy theories in Turkey and feeds deep anti-American
sentiment among those who fear Gülen. They don’t understand why these former
spooks and diplomats have been helping him. Frankly, neither do I. Nor can I
dismiss their fears as absurd Oriental delusions; on the face of it, it might
make sense for the United States to back Gülen. He is pragmatically
pro-American; he has been quoted as saying that he would do nothing to
undermine America’s interests in the region. He is suspicious of Russians and
Iranians, as are we. He is influential enough in Turkey that it’s at least
plausible to imagine that America wants to placate him or use him. I understand
why many Turks believe that Gülen is reposing himself in the Poconos because,
for some inscrutable imperial purpose, we’re protecting him.
Unfortunately, I know enough about American foreign policy to be confident
that we’re not that smart. Our government is often astonishingly incompetent,
with branches habitually failing to communicate important information with one
another and even senior officials uninterested in following the details of
complex events in Turkey. I also know that Americans are on the whole very kind
and decent and want very much to be friends with Muslims who say that they
denounce terrorism. But they don’t understand that by befriending Gülen, they
infuriate Muslims in Turkey who likewise denounce terrorism but who also loathe
Gülen as a power-hungry opportunist.
Gülen has used his time in
America to become the largest operator—or perhaps merely inspirer—of charter
schools in the United States. Sharon Higgens, who founded the organization
Parents Across America, believes that there are now 135 Gülen-inspired charter
schools in the country, enrolling some 45,000 students. That would make the
Gülen network larger than KIPP—the runner-up, with 109 schools. The schools, in
25 states, have anodyne names: Horizon Science Academy, Pioneer Charter School
of Science, Beehive Science and Technology Academy. Thousands of Turkish
nationals, almost all of them male, have come to America on H-1B visas specifically
to teach in them. The schools focus on math and science, and their students
often do well enough on standardized tests. The administrators say that they
have no official ties to Gülen, and Gülen denies any connection to the schools.
But federal forms required of nonprofits show that virtually all the schools
have opened or operate with the aid of Gülen-inspired groups—local nonprofits
that promote Turkish culture. The Ohio-based Horizon Science Academy of
Springfield, for example, cosigned a five-year building lease with Chicago’s
Niagara Foundation, which explicitly promotes Gülen’s philosophy of “tolerance,
dialogue and peace.”
The FBI and the Departments of Labor and Education have been investigating
the hiring practices of some of these schools, as the New York Times and the Philadelphia Inquirer have
reported—particularly the replacement of certified American teachers with
uncertified Turkish ones who get higher salaries than the Americans did, using
visas that are supposed to be reserved for highly skilled workers who fill
needs unmet by the American workforce. The schools claim, according to an
article written by Higgens in the Washington
Post, that they are unable to find qualified teachers in America—which
seems implausible, given that we’re in the depths of the worst economic
downturn in postwar memory, and given that some of these new arrivals have come
to teach English, which often they speak poorly, or English as a second
language, which often they need themselves. They have also been hired as gym
teachers, accountants, janitors, caterers, painters, construction workers,
human-resources managers, public-relations specialists, and—of all
things—lawyers.
Two of the schools, located in Texas, have been accused of sending school
funds—which are supplied by the government, of course, since these are charter
schools—to other Gülen-inspired organizations. Last year, the New York Times reported that the
charters were funneling some $50 million in public funds to a network of
Turkish construction companies, among them the Gülen-related Atlas Texas Construction
and Trading. The schools had hired Atlas to do construction, the paper said,
though other bidders claimed in lawsuits that they had submitted more
economical bids. Meanwhile, Atlas may have played a part in protecting Gülen
charter schools; Folwell Dunbar, an official at the Louisiana Department of
Education, has accused Atlas’s vice president, Inci Akpinar, of offering him a
$25,000 bribe to keep mum about troubling conditions at the Abramson Science
and Technology Charter School in New Orleans. Dunbar sent a memo to department
colleagues, the Times-Picayune reported,
noting that “Akpinar flattered him with ‘a number of compliments’ before
getting to the point: ‘I have twenty-five thousand dollars to fix this problem:
twenty thousand for you and five for me.’ ” Abramson is operated by the Pelican
Foundation, which is linked to the Gülen-inspired Cosmos Foundation in
Texas—which runs the two Texas schools.
Utah’s Beehive Science and Technology Academy, another Gülen-inspired
charter, was $337,000 in debt, according to a financial probe by the Utah
Schools Charter Board. The Deseret
News tried to figure out where all this taxpayer money had gone.
“In a time of teacher layoffs, Beehive has recruited a high percentage of
teachers from overseas, mainly Turkey,” the newspaper reported. “Many of these
teachers had little or no teaching experience before they came to the United
States. Some of them are still not certified to teach in Utah. The school spent
more than $53,000 on immigration fees for foreigners in five years. During the
same time, administrators spent less than $100,000 on textbooks, according to
state records.” Reports have also claimed that the school board was almost
entirely Turkish.
A reporter for the leftist magazine In These Times noted in 2010 that the Chicago Math and
Science Academy obscured its relationship to Gülen. And the school board was
strikingly similar to Beehive’s: “When I went to the school’s board meeting on
July 8, I was taken aback to see a board of directors comprised entirely of
men. They all appeared of Turkish, Bosnian or Croatian descent. Although I have
nothing against Turkish, Bosnian or Croatian men, it does seem that a school
board serving students who are 58 percent Hispanic/Latino, 25 percent African
American, 12 percent Asian and 5 percent white might be well served by some
women board members and board members from ethnic backgrounds the school
predominantly serves.”
Federal authorities are also investigating several of the movement’s
schools for forcing employees to send part of their paychecks to Turkey, the Inquirer reports. Also worrying
is that some of these schools, after being granted the right to issue large,
tax-free public bonds, are now defaulting on them. The New York Times recently reported
that Gülen-inspired schools in Georgia had defaulted on $19 million in public
bonds, having granted hundreds of thousands of dollars in contracts to
businesses associated with Gülen followers.
There is no evidence that
Islamic proselytizing takes place at the American Gülen schools and much
evidence that students and parents like them. Most seem to be decent
educational establishments, by American standards; graduates perform reasonably
well, and some perform outstandingly.
So what are the schools for? Among other things, they seem to be
moneymakers for the cemaat.
They’re loaded with private, state, and federal funding, and they have proved
amazingly effective at soliciting private donations. The schools are also H-1B
visa factories and perhaps the main avenue for building the Gülen community in
the United States. In 2011, 292 of the 1,500 employees at the Gülen-inspired
Harmony School of Innovation, a Texas charter school, were on H-1B visas, the
school’s superintendent told the New
York Times. The feds have investigated Concept Schools, which operate 16
Horizon Science Academies across Ohio, on the suspicion that they illegally
used taxpayer money to pay immigration and legal fees for people they never
even employed, an Ohio ABC affiliate discovered. The feds’ suspicion was
confirmed by state auditors. Concept Schools repaid the fees for their
Cleveland and Toledo schools shortly before the ABC story broke, but it’s
unclear whether they have repaid—or can repay—the
fees for their other schools.
Perhaps to deflect scrutiny from the schools, people “inspired” by Gülen
are constantly inviting high-ranking leaders to dinners to speak and lavishing
them with awards. And remember those trips to Turkey that the Turkish-Irish
Educational and Cultural Society organizes? The same thing happens in the
United States. Dozens of Texans, ranging from state lawmakers to congressional
staff members to university professors, have taken trips to Turkey financed by
Gülen’s foundations. The Raindrop Foundation, for instance, paid for State Senator
Leticia Van de Putte’s travel to Istanbul, according to a recent campaign
report. Last January, she cosponsored a state senate resolution commending
Gülen for “his ongoing and inspirational contributions to promoting global
peace and understanding.”
Steve Terrell, a reporter at the Santa Fe New Mexican, did a bit of digging and found that a remarkable
number of local lawmakers had recently taken trips to Turkey courtesy of a
private group, the Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians, that is tied
to Gülen. In Idaho last year, a full tenth of state legislators went on the
Turkey-trot tour, thanks to the Pacifica Institute, also inspired by Gülen. The
Hawaii State Ethics Commission sent a memo to lawmakers reminding them to check
with the commission before accepting the all-expenses-paid trip to Turkey to
which they’d been invited by Pacifica. “The State Ethics Commission,” said the
memo, “does not have sufficient understanding of Pacifica Institute, the
purpose of the trip, or the state ‘benefit’ associated with the trip.”
It is no very cynical asperity to wonder if all these trips are connected
to the staggering amount of public money going to Gülen-inspired charter
schools. Indeed, America is the only country in the world where the Gülen
movement has been able to establish schools funded to a great extent by the
host country’s taxpayers.
But does the cemaat want something more than
money? Its supporters call it a “faith-based civil-society movement.” Mehmet
Kalyoncu, an advisor to the ambassador of the Organisation of Islamic
Cooperation to the United Nations, has observed correctly that the cemaat’s Turkish enemies call it a
creature of the CIA or the Mossad, a secret servant of the pope, or a Trojan
horse trying to Christianize Muslims or weaken them. To some Western critics,
such as Michael Rubin, the cemaat is
“a shadowy Islamist cult,” anti-Semitic, anti-Western, and trying to Islamize
Americans. Gülen is a second Khomeini, Rubin has warned, who is trying to
establish a new caliphate.
But none of that is quite right. According to researcher Aydin Ozipek, who
attended a Gülen school, “the primary objective of the Gülen Movement is to
increase its share of power.” That, it seems to me, is the most accurate
description of all. The cemaat poses
problems not because its members are pious Muslims (that’s probably the most
admirable thing about them) but because it’s a power-hungrybusiness that often behaves
repulsively—like a mafia, in other words. Gülen does not run “madrassas” in
America, as some have suggested; he runs charter schools. He does not “practice taqiya”; he just dissimulates, like
any ordinary politician.
I doubt that Gülen is a significant threat to American interests in the
Middle East. For pragmatic reasons, the movement is friendly to any country
where it can establish a business presence; if we stay friendly to business, it
will stay friendly to us, however we define our interests. The cemaat need not be a problem
within America, either, so long as we deal with it with our eyes open and make
sure that its members are obeying the law. But eyes open is the key. Here’s another excerpt from that
infamous sermon that surfaced in 1999: “The philosophy of our service is that
we open a house somewhere and, with the patience of a spider, we lay our web to
wait for people to get caught in the web; and we teach those who do. We don’t
lay the web to eat or consume them but to show them the way to their
resurrection, to blow life into their dead bodies and souls, to give them a
life.” Those are words that suggest that Gülen’s activities in the United
States deserve careful scrutiny—scrutiny because his business is organized and
he thinks ahead.
Overall, America’s assimilative power has a track record far more
impressive than Gülen’s. Our posture toward the Gülen movement in America has
been, if inadvertently and late in coming, the right one: indict those who need
indicting for specific, established crimes—visa fraud and, I suspect,
racketeering—and wait for the next generation to become Americans. Treat people
inspired by Gülen to the rule of law—to the same laws that everyone else in
America follows. If they don’t already see it, they will recognize in time that
those laws are excellent and connected to the economic opportunities that they
enjoy. In fact, they may even do America some good, insofar as they’re locked
into battle with the teachers’ unions: if Gülen’s followers can break them,
more power to them. Maybe one day, we’ll even get a great American cemaat novel out of their
experience.
Our posture toward the movement as a foreign policy actor, however, to the
extent that I can understand it, has been foolish. It is wrong to imagine that
Gülen can be some kind of asset to us internationally or to accept or promote
him as one. He has not been elected in Turkey—our NATO ally—or anywhere else.
We have an interest in seeing Turkey become a full-fledged liberal democracy. That means
supporting Gülen’s stated ideals—not him.
It is very sad that your are blemishing a person who devoted his entire life for humanity. He had prisoned, exiled and scarified everything he had for his ideals. I had nothing for return. But you could not see these because you are very opinionated. You have written an article based on your biased selective reading. I know it is very unlikely but i suggest you to log on to http://fgulen.org/ and try to read it with an open mind.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.minority-opinion.com/2012/11/another-take-on-fethullah-gulen.html
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