Fethullah Gülen: alleged coup mastermind – and friendly neighbor

Islamic Scholar Fethullah Gulen
Islamic Scholar Fethullah Gulen


Date posted: July 17, 2016

Amana Fontanella-Khan in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania

The rural town of Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania, seems unfazed by the attempted military coup that rocked Turkey overnight on Friday, and threatened to destabilise the region.

At a little over 5,000 miles away from Istanbul – Turkey’s biggest city and the heart of the country’s failed putsch – that is hardly surprising, save for the fact that the uprising’s alleged mastermind, Fethullah Gülen, has made his home in Saylorsburg.

His presence causes commotion from time to time. When Turkey is sporadically plunged into political chaos, attention often flocks towards his guarded compound. It was the same on Friday, when residents could hear helicopters circling over Gülen’s home.

Apart from mysterious choppers, there are also the occasional anti-Gülen protesters. Sometimes they drive up and down Mt Eaton Road, one of the main thoroughfares in the farming town, waving the Turkish flag out of their windows.

Apart from that, living next to the man who Recep Tayyip Erdoğan personally blames for trying to overthrow the government has few downsides. Indeed, it can have perks – invitations to Thanksgiving dinner, for example. Or, even, some claim, a trip to Turkey.

To the wider world, Gülen’s living arrangements are shrouded in secrecy. It is peculiar enough that the leader of the Hizmet movement, in self-exile from Turkey, lives in a small Pennsylvania town, nestled in the Poconos.

He sleeps in a small and spartan room in a sprawling complex, the Golden Generation Worship and Retreat Center, where his movement offers religious instruction. At any given time, there are up to 80 visitors undergoing religious retreats. For a man widely described as reclusive, he has many guests, including Saylorsburg residents.

Chuck Parker, who lives down the road from Gülen, said: “When we have the traditional Thanksgiving, he has a dinner then. He also has a dinner for Ramadan.” He and many other residents have received invitations, which often come with a personal touch. “They usually hand deliver it, or one of the guys bring it over.”

The dinners arouse much interest among some of the residents. One elderly man, who asked not to be named, said: “I went to a dinner four years ago. My mother was 97. She always wanted to go, because other neighbors from the area went. And then we went.”

The man, who was taking a break from picking cucumbers from his vegetable patch, said: “I’ve been to his dinners a couple of times. They treat you nice. You don’t see him”, he said, referring to Gülen. “They escort you to the building. They tell you where to park. There is an escort there, and an escort back.”

Residents agree that the warm welcome and hospitality that Gülen offers residents is a defining feature of the group’s presence in the town. Holly Parker, a stained-glass artists, who has received invitations to the dinners, said: “According to the Muslim culture, they invite the neighbors for things … They do it to extend themselves out into the community a little bit. I think they realize that there might be a few people in the community who might be wary.”

Though none of the people the Guardian met in Saylorsburg had anything bad to say about the neighborliness of Gülen, Parker suggested that some residents might “feel iffy” about the group being headquartered in their town. “Some people are a little wary, and have questions like: why are they here? Why are they in the country?” But, she insists, she has no complains to make of them. “They’ve been very nice.”

Some residents have gotten very close to Gülen. “Some of the neighbors have had more personal and close contact,” Parker said. “A friend of ours, whose mother lives next door to the camp, he’s a contractor in the area. He did a lot of building for them, when they were building the resort situation back there,.”

The Guardian was not able to reach the contractor, Howard Beers Jr, but two residents confirmed that he had worked for Gülen. “Several years ago, they offered to take him and his wife to tour Turkey,” said Parker. Beers wasn’t the only resident to have been invited to Turkey by the organization. “At the time, they offered to take our pastor as well. He didn’t go.” Parker added that, back then, the members of the movement, which often promotes inter-faith dialogue, would visit her non-denominational church “every once in a while”.

Some locals see the presence of the well-funded Hizmet movement as a business opportunity. “When I am ready to sell this house, I am going to go to the Turks, and see if they want to buy it,” said the elderly neighbour, who was taking a break from the vegetable patch. He added that a contractor, presumably Beers, had “made his millions” working for Gülen.

Others in the area are catering to the movement in different ways. Parker recalled: “It’s interesting, the local K-Mart for a while was playing what I think was popular Turkish music down at [nearby town] Wind Gap. There are a lot of Turkish families moving in. You see them in the local stores sometimes.”

Fleeting glimpses of the Turkish community prompts different responses among long-time residents. “If you drive early in the morning, you see moms standing out with their children along the road waiting for the bus. I look and think, I just hope there is enough of a community … It must be very lonely to be a mom and isolated in this area.” Chuck Parker, her husband, added: “I always wave to the ladies. Sometimes they are a little shy.”

If Gülen is extending a hand of friendship to his neighbors, many are returning the gesture. “We’re all immigrants here,” said Parker. “In my family, we’re part French, Hungarian, English. This is what America is about. We weren’t liked when we arrived either. But we’re Americans now.”

Source: The Guardian , July 17, 2016


Related News

It’s not about a conflict between the government and Hizmet movement

Insanity ripples through the country, the media and the people. If graft or corruption is the prevailing form of life spreading from the state to society, and if this form of life is supported by people, then we are hitting the bottom day by day. A prosecutor can say “We can detain 500 thousand people if necessary” and still hold his post as if he said quite an ordinary thing. Whereas in Europe mental health of such a prosecutor would be called into question and most probably examined.

Lawyers for Gulen Call Flynn’s Comments ‘Troubling’

Gulen has never been charged with a crime in the U.S., and he has consistently denounced terrorism as well as the failed coup in Turkey. One of Gulen’s lawyers, Jason Weinstein, called Flynn’s comments about Gulen “troubling” but said the extradition process is a legal matter in the hands of the Department of Justice.

US Congressional Record: President Erdogan’s Assault on the Human Rights of the Turkish People

I rise to remind our government that the human rights abuses committed by Turkish President Erdogan are grave and ongoing, and to distinguish between the Turkish president and the Turkish people–and to stand with the people.

Bank Asya shares surge after Turkish election results

The AK Party’s failure to secure enough votes to form the government reflects on the stock market, with the politically-seized Bank Asya’s shares observing a 10.75 percent increase at opening on Monday amidst an overall drop in Borsa Istanbul.

600 complaints filed alleging slander, libel against Gülen

A total of 600 complaints have been filed against those who have slandered and libeled Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen since a major corruption and bribery investigation became public on Dec. 17 of last year.

AK Party’s Deputy Günay joins intra-party opposition to prep school ban

Another deputy from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has criticized a recent government plan to shut down prep schools, saying that these institutions are not the cause of problems in the education system but a consequence of the current system. Günay’s remarks come one day after the AK Party referred Kütahya deputy İdris Bal to the party’s disciplinary board for expulsion after he opposed the government’s plan to close prep schools.

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

In Case You Missed It

TUSKON: Twitter ban a disappointment in information age

Netherlands investigating Turkish professor’s remark that killing Gülenists is permissible in Islam

Africa, Albania and Erdogan’s campaign against Turkish schools

‘A very good representative of the best in Islam, Hizmet contributes to the non-Muslim world’s understanding of Islam’

The Peace Islands Institute’s 5th Annual Law Enforcement Appreciation Award

Unscrupulous news reporting by Der Spiegel

At home and abroad, Erdogan shoots himself in the foot

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News