Accused by Erdogan of plotting a coup, Hizmet movement fears for freedom in Turkey


Date posted: February 20, 2014

Mariana Timóteo da Costa

SÃO PAULO – Considered by most of the western public as mysterious and accused by the Turkish government of being behind of the political crisis that shook the country, the Hizmet movement has been making a public relations offensive to show what this organization is and what it does. This is the biggest civil society entity in Turkey and assures that they have no political agenda. They have representations in 150 countries – including Brazil. The Hizmet is based on the idea of a “modern Islam compatible with democracy” that has been disseminated by Fethullah Gülen since the 1960’s. Gülen, now 75 years old, is a former imam, writer, thinker and teacher. He has been living in the US in volunteer exile since 1999, when he left Turkey due to successive military coups. Even from afar, Gülen keeps influencing thousands of Turks and Muslims around the world.

There is a number of businessmen related to the Hizmet movement inside and out of Turkey: there are hospitals, schools and media conglomerates owners like Cihan News Agency, the biggest in the country, which has correspondents in 82 countries including Brazil, where it established an office in 2011 in the Jardins neighborhood, Sao Paulo. The agency produces content for the printed newspaper “Zaman”, linked to the same group, which has the highest circulation in Turkey with sales of 1.25 million per day and a version in English.

“We are obviously very worried about the recent attacks of (Prime Minister) Recep Tayyip Erdogan against freedom of expression in Turkey, for example, the controlling of Internet. Gülen, by the way, is very sad with the path Turkey is taking because he has always believed that Islam is compatible with democracy.” Says Bayram Ozturk, Ph.D. in Islamic Theology, who has been living in Brazil for two years.

Ozturk is a columnist for “Zaman” and disciple of Gülen, with whom he studied for three years during the 1990’s. The activities of Hizmet in Brazil include: the news agency and newspaper; a cultural center (CCBT); the Brazil-Turkey Business Association; there is also a school (elementary and high school) called “Belo Futuro Internacional”, situated at the Santo Amaro district, Sao Paulo.

Yusuf Elemen, director of CCBT in Sao Paulo, rejects labels that Hizmet (“service” in Turkish) is a kind of “Turkish Opus Dei”, as it has been described before.

“Our school in Sao Paulo, for example, is open to any child, from any belief, there is no religious education. Gülen has always defended interfaith dialogue.” He says, noting that the former imam was the first leader of Islam to condemn the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the US. “He also condemns any kind of violence. The movement is not religious or ideological. It is a civic movement, although inspired by (Islamic) faith.”

In addition, Hizmet promotes many volunteer works in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, focusing on the distribution of food in shantytowns (favelas). About the current oppression the group is facing by the government in Turkey, Ozturk recollects that as soon as Erdogan came to power, in 2003, he tried to get closer to Gülen, who even supported him on the elaboration of a new Constitution. Even though, according to the disciple, Hizmet has never made a coalition with the government.

“Erdogan insisted many times that Gülen should go back to Turkey to build up an alliance. However, he never felt safe to do so. The recent events show that he was right. The prime minister took a series of disastrous decisions about internal and foreign policies. He blames Hizmet for the instability simply because our ideals of democracy and modernity find echo among many dissatisfied Turks,” says Ozturk.

According to him, Fethullah Gülen is always surrounded by students in a house in the American state of Pennsylvania. To join the course they need to live with the imam: women are only accepted if they are married. Gülen is not married and does not have children. The courses consist of discussing how the teachings of the Qur’an can be applied to the modern world. Gülen has diabetes, blood pressure and heart problems. Therefore, he seldom leaves the house. Longtime disciples like Ozturk pay him visits “once or twice a year”.

“A great deal of the instability and violence the Islamic world faces today happen because there is a delay on the intellectual level of its population. This delay happens on the development of the countries and their way of thinking: it is not possible to blame the delay on Western Colonization or on Imperialism anymore. In the first centuries of Islam, we were part of very advanced societies. We need to bring that back,” states Gülen’s disciple.

Published [in Portuguese] on O Globo
Translated by Camila Oliveira Vatandaş

Source: HizmetMovement.com , February 19, 2014


Related News

New Level of Witch Hunt: Relatives are Targeted in Turkey

On July 26, Turkish police stormed the house of Muhammet Cakir, a lawyer wanted for arrest on coup charges. Failing to find the lawyer at home, they detained his 86-year-old mother to force her son to surrender. She has been kept as hostage since.

Turkey’s Erdogan and unending human rights repression

The judiciary, media organisations, opposition parties, civil servants, charity groups, just to mention a few, are being subjected to a daily dose of massive abuses and suffocation in Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The recent catch to the abuse list is the sacking of medical professionals, scientists, and other academics from universities.

Businessmen released following operation against Gülen movement

Based on the government’s much criticized “reasonable suspicion” law, a large number of businessmen in Uşak province were detained last week as part of an investigation into the so-called “parallel structure,” although most of them were released late on Friday night due to a lack of evidence to support a possible prosecution.

Turkey’s efforts in Somalia

Kimse Yok Mu Foundation, in cooperation with the local Bedir Schools, has definitely undertaken great initiatives, in an effort to combat the famine, drought and tragedy in Somalia.

Fethullah Gulen: Bridge Between Islam And The West

Gulen deserves this honour considering the quantum leap in humanity that is tied to his spirit of caring for those in need without any strings attached. He remains the best example of service to humanity in a world running short of caring models.

Toward an Islamic enlightenment

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, who has put forward an interpretation of Islam that advocates peace, democracy, secularism (in the sense of freedom of religion and conscience for all), science, education and a market economy, and who has supported interfaith dialogue and mutual understanding and respect for people of different ethnic and religious identities and lifestyles, has been the topic of much curiosity for native as well as foreign observers of Turkey.

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Karınca Yuvası (Ant Nest) from Turkish designers to Bangladeshi orphans

The Famous Soccer Player Hiding in Plain Sight in a California Bakery

Turkey’s Gulen Demand – The U.S. shouldn’t extradite the exiled Turk without better evidence

School officials to sue the Turkish ambassador for defamation

Malian first lady commends local Turkish schools

Right to dissent in Turkey

Fethullah Gülen’s Message for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News