From Poconos retreat, Muslim cleric Gulen: ‘We will oblige’ if extradited for Turkish coup

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen
Photo Credit: JEREMY ROEBUCK
Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen Photo Credit: JEREMY ROEBUCK


Date posted: July 17, 2016

Jeremy Roebuck

SAYLORSBURG, Pa. – The reclusive Muslim cleric blamed by the Turkish government for last week’s failed military coup said Sunday he did not believe U.S. authorities would give in to Turkish demands for his extradition.

But during a rare interview at his gated retreat in the Poconos, Fethullah Gulen, 77, said if he were asked to leave by the State Department, he would comply.

“If a request from what is essentially a dictator is taken seriously in the United States, I think it would run contrary to what the United States stands for,” he said, speaking through an interpreter, of his former ally-turned-bitter-foe Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“But if there is any possibility of a forceful extradition, of course we will oblige,” he added. “But I’m not worried about that. I’m not worried that the U.S. government will give credit to claims that Erdogan is making. I will not beg anybody. I have enjoyed my freedom here, I will leave without grudges in my heart.”

Gulen, who just two days earlier was accused by Erdogan of plotting the quashed military uprising half a world away, spoke for nearly and hour and a half to a handful of reporters, most of them from foreign media outlets.

Dressed in a dark blazer and blue slacks, the mustachioed cleric addressed a wide array of topics, ranging from his multitude of followers, members of a movement known as Hizmet – or Turkish for “service” – to the pain he has felt as Turkish officials have lain the deaths of civilians at his feet.

“My friends know my sensitivity to any living being,” he said. “In my room once there was a bee that was trapped in a cleaning machine. I tried to save its life, but I couldn’t and I cried for days. When I saved the life of an ant in my bathroom, I was happy like a child.

“This is my sensitivity and compassion toward any living being. . . . For humans, my sensitivity is so much more.”

Again Sunday, Gulen denied any involvement in Turkey’s failed coup while condemning “oppression” in his native country.

“During the last two years, our experience has resembled that of Robespierre in France,” he said, referring to the ruthless leader of the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution.

Gulen, who teaches a philosophy based in Islamic mysticism mixed with advocacy for education and democracy, has attracted a multitude of followers who run universities, hospitals and a large media empire in Turkey and, in the United States, a loosely affiliated network of professional associations and charities in addition to charter schools funded by millions of taxpayer dollars, including some in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

But nearly 5,000 miles from his wooded, 26-acre retreat in the rural hamlet of Saylorsburg, Erdogan continued to rail against the man he has labeled a terrorist.

Gulen has been a frequent target of Erdogan, who blames him and his movement for problems plaguing Turkey. Gulen’s followers, however, accuse the Turkish president of paranoia and exaggerating the cleric’s influence against Turkey’s increasingly autocratic regime.

Since Friday, Turkey has detained as many as 6,000 people in a crackdown on alleged coup plotters while funerals were held for some of at least 265 people killed in the failed uprising.

“Once they hand over that head terrorist in Pennsylvania to us, everything will be clear,” Erdogan told a crowd massed Saturday night.

At a funeral Sunday, the president vowed to “clean all state institutions of the virus” of Gulen supporters, while crowds chanted “Fethullah will come and pay.”

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has said that the State Department would consider an extradition request from Turkey that was backed by solid evidence of Gulen’s involvement in the coup.

However, speaking Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Kerry said the United States had not yet received such a request.

“We have not had a formal request for extradition – that has to come in a formal package” sent to the Justice Department, Kerry said. “Give us the evidence, show us the evidence. We need a solid legal foundation that meets the standard of extradition in order for our courts to approve such a request.”

Kerry was adamant that the U.S. had no involvement in the military uprising – as Turkish officials suggested.

“The United States is not harboring anybody, we’re not preventing anything from happening,” he said. “We think it’s irresponsible to have accusations of American involvement when we’re simply waiting for their request” for the extradition.

As tensions flared between the two NATO allies Sunday, the residents of Saylorsburg – a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it-stop off Pennsylvania Route 33 about 88 miles north of Philadelphia – were both bemused and concerned to suddenly find themselves and their world-famous neighbor at the center of an international dispute.

In nearby Wind Gap, American flags festooned lampposts and nearly every home on Broadway, the main drag through town. In nearby Ross Township, residents recalled the last time events there drew the attention of the world – a caught-on-video 2013 attack by a lone gunman on a Township council meeting that left three residents dead.

Those who live closest to the Golden Generation Worship and Retreat Center described the Gulenists who live on its sprawling grounds as friendly neighbors, who often go door-to-door inviting residents to dinners and events at the retreat.

One 80-year-old man, who did not wish to give his name, said Gulen followers used to bring flowers and Turkish desserts to his wife.

“You don’t know what they’re up to,” he said. “But they do try to make friends. We’ve never had a problem with them.”

Glen Packer, 64, whose house sits next door to the compound, said protesters occasionally gather in front of the retreat, disturbing the neighborhood’s typical tranquility. One such group – a crowd of 150 pro-Erdogan demonstrators – rallied across the two-lane road from the property Saturday, draping themselves in Turkish flags and chanting “Obama, send him home” and “a terrorist lives here.”

“They seem nice enough,” Packer said Sunday of the Gulenists. “But whatever, I just live here.”

Gulen came to the Golden Generation retreat, a former summer camp, in the late ’90’s at the request of Kemal Ozgur, a microbiologist and follower of the Gulenist movement. The two met in Minnesota, where Gulen had come to receive medical treatment for diabetes and a heart ailment, which still affects his health. He has remained in Saylorsburg ever since.

Gulen’s spokesman, Y. Alp Aslandogan, an urbane, thin man dressed in a dark gray suit, greeted visitors to the retreat Sunday, offering a tour of the grounds and an overview of the Hizmet movement.

While the Gulenists have been on the retreat property since at least the 1990s, property records indicate the Golden Generation purchased the acreage in 2014 for $250,000.

Children ran across carefully manicured lawns, while mustachioed Turkish men donning casual clothes strolled across the landscaped acreage, where stone paths curved around gardens and ponds.

“This place has a unique combination of being very peaceful and very tranquil,” he said. “It is good for his health. His doctor said the situation in Turkey was too stressful.

These days, Gulen spends most of his time in his quarters – a sparsely furnished set of rooms filled primarily by a mattress on the floor, covered by a thin gray quilt, upon which he sleeps. Shelves of books line walls competing for space with an electric space heater, a Turkish flag and a small, fringed rug woven in burgundy, blue and white.

Typically, he speaks once or twice a week to followers who flock to the retreat from across the world, Aslandogan said. The speeches are later shared over the internet.

“This is his primary means of communication with the movement,” Aslandogan said.

But speaking to reporters Sunday, Gulen downplayed his role as a movement leader.

“I am not the head of them,” he said. “Just because I was one of the early people and I’m older than them, they respect me and attribute many things to me, but that is incorrect.”

He added: “I see myself as a termite and these participants are also termites. When God wishes, he can enable them to accomplish great things even though they are individually insignificant.”

jroebuck@phillynews.com

 

Source: The Inquirer Daily News , July 17, 2016


Related News

University of Florida and the failed coup in Turkey

On July 15 in Istanbul, Turkey, soldiers closed the two bridges across the Bosphorus, the first indication that elements of the army were planning to remove the government of President Recip Tayyip Erdogan. In Ankara, the national capital, other soldiers took control of television stations and shelled the parliament building. President Erdogan had to use […]

Fethullah Gülen is a Chance for Humanity: His Inclusive Perspective for Sustainable Global Triangulation

The basic values that mark the twenty-first century are modernism, pluralism, individualism, and religion. Some claim that modernity embraces individual and social life as a whole, and that it has created new forms of religious, cultural, and political pluralism. There is no doubt that the world today is in need of dialogue between cultures and civilizations more than at any other time; this is of the utmost urgency.

Gursel Tekin: Gulen’s remarks on the third bridge are valuable

Hüseyin Keleş Republican People’s Party Deputy Chairman Gursel Tekin gave the daily Zaman noteworthy statements on Turkey’s heated agenda. Speaking of the controversies over naming the third bridge as “Yavuz Sultan Selim”, Tekin expressed his support for Fethullah Gulen’s remarks, saying, “Let’s not sacrifice all the bridges to build one. To me, we should not ruin the order […]

Fethullah Gülen’s Message of Condolences for Those Who Lost Their Lives During Gaza Protests

I am shocked and deeply saddened by the outbreak of violence on the Gaza border, which resulted in the death of more than 50 and injury of thousands more. I urge Israel to stop shooting at civilians and to respect the right to peaceful protest.

Turkey after the purge: Journalists and judges pay the price

Immediately after the failed coup, the administration published lists of people that Erdogan claimed had participated in the coup. The lists included people from all professions, and journalists were no exception. Turkey now has the highest number of imprisoned journalists in the world, with three times the number jailed as Iran and China.

Gülen calls for peaceful coexistence, warns about deceit and oppression

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has called for living together in peace, echoing similar remarks issued by President Abdullah Gül last week against the background of two-week-long anti-government protests in Turkey. “For the love of God, let’s live for a while in a [spirit] of brotherhood,” Gülen said, borrowing a theme from a popular song […]

Latest News

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

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

In Case You Missed It

Atyrau student wins silver in Brazil research competition

The AKP-Israeli thaw

Filipino – Turkish Tolerance School students excel in ICAS 2014 exam, Ten others top in campus journalism

Turkish imams spied on Gülen sympathizers in Romania as well

Plan to finish off the Hizmet movement

People overwhelmingly support democracy as answer to Kurdish issue

Turkey stands by Somalia during Eid Al-Adha

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News