After Reunion: A Quiet Transformation Within the Hizmet Movement


Date posted: October 31, 2025

Following the passing of the late Fethullah Gülen, the U.S. leg of the commemorative tour “After Reunion” concluded last weekend with a moving finale at Felician University’s Breslin Center for the Performing Arts in New Jersey. The 1,500-seat hall was filled to capacity. On the surface, it was a memorial; beneath it, a quiet transformation within the Hizmet Movement was unfolding.

At the opening, Dr. Erkan Ertosun, president of the Northeast America Civic Platform, offered a remark that framed the evening:

“Yes, Gülen is no longer with us, but his ideals and his action continue to live on.”

That single sentence revealed the night’s deeper meaning. Beyond emotion, the event reflected a sociological turning point. In Gülen’s absence, the Movement appears to be entering a new era—one grounded in the collective consciousness and values he championed.

Rebuilding Through Culture and Art

The program reached far beyond a traditional religious ceremony. Young artists opened with the poem “Let Your Name Be Heard,” followed by theatrical sketches depicting key moments in Gülen’s life: his childhood in Erzurum, his spiritual awakening in Edirne, his youth in Izmir, and his interrogations in Burdur.

Here, art was not mere ornament—it became the living language of collective memory. It offered a mode of expression that did not reject the tradition of sermons and preaching, but instead translated emotion into artistic form.

Onstage, more than a leader was being remembered—a culture was being renewed. The closing song, “A New World,” captured the spirit of the night with the line: “If we turn back, we are traitors.”
It sounded less like an oath of loyalty than a declaration of moral resolve.

The Birth of a Global Identity

Perhaps the most striking feature of the evening was the diversity of its performers: Said from Tanzania, Arseldi from Albania, Melike from Germany—each singing in a different language, yet in the same spirit. The scene symbolized the Movement’s transformation from a Turkish-rooted initiative into a truly global community.

Once known primarily for its educational and civic work in Turkey, the Hizmet Movement has evolved into a multicultural moral network—a shared spiritual space connecting people across continents under a common vision.

Each performance onstage felt like a form of collective healing. When the verses “This man is my teacher” were recited, the deep silence that filled the hall spoke of both longing and restoration.

Years of trauma—imprisonments, exile, and loss—have left profound scars on the Movement’s collective memory. Yet this program revealed how pain can be transformed into prayer, music, and art.
As Dr. İsmail Büyükçelebi observed:

“These programs restore life and energy to our community.”

A New Era for Hizmet

In the absence of Gülen, the Movement’s direction has become quieter, more cultural, and more universal. The spiritual universe he left behind now stands at the center. Beyond theological discourse, a moral language shaped through art, empathy, and conscience is emerging.

This evolution can be read as Hizmet’s answer to the changing language of our time—a reawakening through creativity, reflection, and shared humanity.

Author: Aydogan Vatandas
Source: Poli Turco


Related News

The role of civil society in Turkey’s democratization

BÜLENT KENEŞ  May 22, 2012 Neither the state nor political parties can act as guarantees for democratization and democracy. With the fact that the main impetus behind and guarantee for our democratization is our ever-growing civil society, we need to consider whether we are attaching due importance to “Civil Society Organizations”. In the speech I […]

Moderate Muslims Find Voice and Spotlight in Worldwide Gulen Movement

Jim Buie Those who’ve foolishly claimed on this blog that there’s “no such thing as a moderate Muslim” and expressed their Islamophobia should by now be fully aware of if not confronted by their own ignorance and bigotry. Did they notice that the very influential Turkish imam, thinker and writer Fetullah Gulen was quick to […]

‘Hizmet is a social movement worldwide, that has a heart, and it’s always from the heart.’

Hizmet works around the world to overcome poverty, and they do it in a very unique way, I think. In some ways, in a model way that could be emulated by others.

The Hizmet (Gulen) movement and transparency

Erkam Tufan Aytav Some groups have been parroting, “The [Gülen] Community should become more transparent.” As you know, with “the Community,” they are referring to the Gülen movement. Let us try to understand this sentence and respond to it. First of all, I need to note that when they say, “the Community,” they are referring […]

Evolution of the Gulen [Hizmet] Movement

HizmetNews.COM  November  14, 2012 Members of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) gathered in Washington DC for a follow up discussion on the Gulen Movement on October 19, 2012. The group’s director Dr. Bulent Aliriza hosted the discussion… and said that the Gulen movement, perhaps more than any other in overall Turkish picture, […]

Why does Fethullah Gülen matter to the world?

It was believed in 2016 that Erdoğan was carrying out a witch hunt to drive Hizmet into the ground so as to completely erase its history in Turkey. However, that witch hunt never seemed to stop. In fact, it continues even today. The most recent examples are Kenya and Kyrgyzstan.

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

12 detained for raising funds to help families of jailed Gülen sympathizers

Turkish headmaster accused of Isis links met Malaysian PM, not fit profile of an Isis operative

TUSKON brings S. African, Turkish firms together

Virginia delegation teams up with Turkish NGO, delivers aid to Syrians

‘Let my husband go to another country, just not Turkey’

White House hosts first-ever Eid al-Adha celebration, Rumi Forum contributes

Teacher abducted from Malaysia subjected to beating, torture in Ankara: cellmate

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News