Gülen’s relatives dismayed over smear campaign against Islamic scholar


Date posted: March 10, 2014

İSTANBUL

Dismayed, if not surprised, by the unabated smear campaign against distinguished Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, the scholar’s relatives have expressed their disappointment and anxiety over the endless accusations and slander against Gülen.

Speaking at a press conference in the Polat Rönesans Hotel in the eastern province of Erzurum, Gülen’s home province, on Sunday, Kemal Gülen, the Islamic scholar’s nephew and a news anchorman with the STV channel, pointed to an ongoing defamation campaign against Gülen and the Hizmet movement inspired by him.

“We have so far remained silent about the heinous attacks and slander against Gülen,” said the news presenter, “but we can no longer turn a blind eye to the defamation campaign aiming to discredit the Islamic scholar and the Hizmet movement, a faith-based social movement.”

The rare gathering brought Gülen’s relatives together to review family matters and the latest developments in the country’s political landscape, which has been shaken by a graft scandal that has since encircled Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government.

While the scandal has caused a crescendo of calls for Erdoğan to resign in the face of his alleged involvement in bribery and misuse of public funds, the government has portrayed the sweeping corruption investigation as a plot to unseat the prime minister and has launched a fierce campaign against the Hizmet movement and Gülen, accusing him of being behind the corruption cases.

These accusations have been firmly rejected, however, by Gülen and the Hizmet movement. Yet again, Erdoğan, as in December of last year, when the anti-corruption operation broke, has failed to produce any evidence to prove his claims. Calling such allegations spurious and wholly unsupported, Kemal Gülen also pointed to government efforts to derail the ongoing corruption investigation.

Kemal Gülen said they are waiting to see what, beyond verbal insults and slander, the government will bring to bear against the movement and Islamic scholar, given the mounting threats of action. Erdoğan has brought his bellicose rhetoric, which includes slander, insults and harsh language, to an unprecedented level in party rallies ahead of the critical local polls, which, in the eyes of opposition parties and critics, are seen as a confidence test of Erdoğan’s long tenure in Turkish politics.

Erdoğan himself has described the local elections as a war of national liberation to free the country from dependency on foreign powers.

“They are delivering unspeakable insults such as ‘fake prophet,’ ‘blood-sucking vampire,’ ‘fake scholar,’ ‘head of a terrorist organization’ and so on against Gülen,” said Kemal Gülen, adding, “The most disturbing and frustrating thing for us is hearing such insults from those who present themselves as the champions of democracy and tolerance.”

In addition to the dozens of insults directed towards Gülen from government circles, the much-circulated “fake prophet” remark has stirred resentment among his family members, who say Gülen has devoted his whole life to promoting the Prophet Mohammed and that the remark is nothing but ridiculous. “We learned to love our Prophet Mohammad through what we learned from the Islamic scholar. He made us love our prophet. Such insults implying that we treat Gülen as a prophet are utter nonsense,” said Kemal Gülen.

Slamming government officials and Erdoğan’s close associates for their alleged involvement in corruption, tender-rigging and bribery, Kemal Gülen emphasized that none of Gülen’s relatives have attempted to exploit the Islamic scholar’s worldwide influence to make a fortune for themselves. Still, he said, Gülen’s relatives live in modest conditions and have no desire for an extravagant life.

The return of Gülen to Turkey, who lives in Pennsylvania in self-imposed exile, is a thorny issue, given how some might react to his reappearance in the country. “It’s up to you, Mr. Gülen,” said his nephew, “to decide when you will return. But we want you to know that you will have your relatives’ full support if you decide to come back.”

Erdoğan had once invited the Islamic scholar to the country. But now Gülen’s followers consider the prime minister’s call insincere, given his belligerent rhetoric and hostility towards the Islamic scholar since the breaking of the corruption investigation. However, some members of the Hizmet movement and critics of the government say Erdoğan’s hostility had been building long before the graft probe emerged.

Source: Todays Zaman , March 9, 2014


Related News

GYV praised for response to accusations about Hizmet movement

GYV Chairman Mustafa Yeşil said the foundation has received very positive reactions to its 11-article statement, adding that many people found the statement an “honorable” and “courteous” one. AK Party Adıyaman deputy Mehmet Metiner said by releasing Tuesday’s statement, the GYV has taken a very valuable step that “spoils the games of some evil circles that want to create hostility between the government and the Hizmet movement.”

Ongoing political raids against schools and businesses are unconstitutional

Inspectors from the tax, finance, fire, social security, environment and urbanization, food, agriculture and husbandry bureaus were brought to the school with Smuggling and Organized Crime Police while the students were in session. Such raids have occurred repeatedly across the educational institutions’ branches, along with other schools, on an almost daily basis.

Woman with soft tissue tumor held in Ankara prison for 8 months: report

Seynur Özdemir, a Turkish woman from Ankara, suffers from soft tissue sarcoma, a rare type of cancer that begins in the tissues that connect, support and surround other body structures. She however has been held in Ankara’s Sİncan prison since June 2019 on terror and coup charges.

Rule of law casualty of AKP-Gulen conflict

The AKP government thinks that by labeling corruption investigations and operations as a “coup” and calling those behind them as “parallel state” that it has found a justifiable way to interfere with the judiciary. Otherwise the government would not have submitted a draft bill to the parliament that totally eliminates the functional independence of the judiciary bureaucracy and promotes the minister of justice, who represents the executive branch, to the status of single decision-maker.

Somalia agrees Turkey’s anti-Gülen crackdown, Kenya, Germany and Indonesia resist

In Kenya, where Gulen’s Omeriye Foundation has grown from its first school in 1998 in the vast Nairobi slum of Kibera to a nationwide network of academies, the government has resisted pressure to close them down. Turkish officials have requested Kenya to shut down the Gulenist schools on a number of occasions before the attempted coup.

Is man living in Pennsylvania responsible for Turkey coup attempt?

Low-flying military jets buzzed over Turkey’s capital of Ankara. Soldiers blocked major bridges in Istanbul. State-run television announced that the military had imposed martial law.

Latest News

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

After Reunion: A Quiet Transformation Within the Hizmet Movement

Erdogan’s Failed Crusade: The World Rejects His War on Hizmet

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

In Case You Missed It

Turkish aid organization opens school in Somalia

Pro-Erdoğan journalist: Gülen followers should be kept in detention camps, given food tickets

Indonesian-Turkish Schools host 5th Science Olympiads

Veteran out of social security coverage after being dismissed in post-coup purge

Ex-ministers call on gov’t to abandon efforts to shut down Turkish schools

Pro-gov’t journalist says jailed Gulenists should be forced to commit suicide

Nigerian govt demands immediate resolution from Turkey

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News