GYV highlights ‘Turkish dream’ at its traditional iftar

The Journalists and Writers Foundation held its traditional iftar at a hotel in İstanbul on Tuesday night with the participation of about 1,000 people. (Photo: Today's Zaman, Üsame Arı)
The Journalists and Writers Foundation held its traditional iftar at a hotel in İstanbul on Tuesday night with the participation of about 1,000 people. (Photo: Today's Zaman, Üsame Arı)


Date posted: July 8, 2015

The traditional iftar by the Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV) was held at the İstanbul Hilton Bosporus Hotel on Tuesday night this year under the theme “The Turkey of our dreams.”

Roughly 1,000 people attended the iftar, which was organized by the GYV for the 21st time. The iftar was attended by many prominent figures, including Zaman Editor-in-Chief Ekrem Dumanlı, Cihan news agency General Manager Abdülhamit Bilici, Samanyolu TV General Manager Metin Yıkar, World Ehl-i Beyt Foundation President Fermani Altun, writer Yavuz Bülent Bakiler, former deputies İlhan İşbilen and İdris Bal, and many other journalists, academics and businesspeople. The iftar was also attended by some family members of police officers who have been arrested in government-backed operations and some families of the 301 mineworkers who were killed in a mining disaster in Soma last year.

Delivering a speech at the event, GYV Vice President Cemal Uşşak talked about the importance of being hopeful about Turkey’s future. “We believe that every beautiful step, every useful project begins with hope. There will be a time when democracy is fully settled [in Turkey] and goes beyond the ballot box; it will be the strongest feature of our politics. There will be a time when the law will be superior to personal political choices and be a guarantor of rights and freedoms. The judiciary will be a center of solutions as an independent and impartial body. … We are hopeful that there will be no problem of poverty. Accountability and transparency will be the most important political criteria,” Uşşak said in his speech, adding that there would be no workplace accidents or cases of domestic violence in the Turkey of his dreams.

Public confidence in the judiciary was deeply shaken in Turkey following the eruption of a corruption scandal in December 2013 in which senior government members were implicated. In an apparent move to cover up the graft claims and consolidate its power, the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government has since taken many controversial steps that have weakened the independence of the judiciary and restricted individual freedoms in Turkey.

“There will be a time when those polarizing society and those who move away from each other today will sit around tables of brotherhood together. Just like today, a harmony of different colors will be possible,” Uşşak said in further remarks.

The eruption of the corruption scandal also led the AK Party government and then-Prime Minister and current President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to employ highly polarizing and divisive discourse against its critics, in particular against the faith-based Gülen movement. Erdoğan accuses the movement of masterminding the corruption probe, while the movement strongly denies the claim.

The GYV is an institution inspired by the teachings of Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, who also inspired the Gülen movement.

A message from Gülen, who is the honorary president of the GYV, was also read at the iftar. Gülen talked about his dream of a Turkey where people of all views are respected, morality dominates and where the country acts as a force of stability in the world with its spirit of unity and solidarity at home.

Some family members of Soma victims offered their thanks to the GYV for their invitation. Naciye Kaya, who lost her husband in the tragedy, said she was very pleased with GYV’s invitation, adding that she is still seeking justice for her husband. “Our pain will never go away. We are looking for justice. Will justice be done in our case? I don’t think such a thing will happen in Turkey,” she said.

Elif Atayün, the daughter of former Police Chief Yurt Atayün, who is among dozens of police officers arrested in government-backed operations, was also among participants at the iftar. She said she and other family members of the arrested police officers want to see democracy and the rule of law working in Turkey again and to be reunited with their loved ones, who have been kept in jail for more than a year without an indictment being ready so far.

The GYV was established in 1994 and its mission and work are inspired by Gülen, who is known for his teachings of “hizmet” (“service” in Turkish), tolerance and dialogue. The GYV has two main principles: respecting differences and coming together. The foundation works to enrich humanity and enhance the culture of coexistence by undertaking projects that emphasize dialogue, mutual understanding and tolerance to establish global peace. It is also interested in issues that concern journalists and holds discussions on topics such as democracy, human rights, secularism and globalization.

Source: Today's Zaman , July 08, 2015


Related News

Interfaith Forum Ignores Islamic Immigration Questions

February 25 panel before about 50 listeners. Like him, “Welcoming the Stranger: Refugees and Immigrants in Our Midst,” a presentation of the controversial Islamic Gülen movement’s Rumi Forum, was uniformly uncritical towards current Middle Eastern refugee issues.

Fethullah Gulen writes in WSJ: Muslims Must Combat the Extremist Cancer

It isn’t fair to blame Islam for the atrocities of violent radicals. But when terrorists claim the Muslim mantle, then they bear this identity, if only nominally. Thus members of the faith must do whatever possible to prevent this cancer from metastasizing in our communities. If we don’t, we’ll be partly responsible for the smeared image of our faith.

Mosaic Foundation brings together Denver’s prominent people over a friendship dinner

Multicultural Mosaic Foundation in Denver, Colorado, recently held its traditional Dialogue and Friendship Dinner at one of the city’s prestigious venues, Cable Center. Having the author-journalist Mustafa Akyol, on his “Islam without Extremes” promotion tour, as its keynote speaker, the event saw the attendance of several assembly members and senators of the states Colorado and Wyoming.

Mongolian teacher Galimbek’s message

Because we have been unable to become a regular and normal democracy, every generation and every social segment has once been defined as a domestic enemy in different periods. One of the things that the clandestine structures governing the old Turkey did best was to declare part of the people as an internal enemy and to launch effective propaganda to undermine their image in the eyes of the people.

‘Portraying Hizmet against settlement process groundless’

In an interview with the Zaman daily last week, GYV vice president Cemal Uşak categorically denied the aspersions that have been cast on the Hizmet movement on social media for a couple of years and in conventional media for the last three months that claim that the Hizmet movement has been against the settlement process.

Dialogslussen establishes tradition of dialogue dinner in Stockholm

Cihan News Agency, STOCKHOLM Renowned for its dialogue efforts across Sweden, the intercultural and interfaith dialogue institution, Dialogslussen, recently held its dialogue dinner that has come to be a tradition in Stockholm. In attendance of the gathering at Sheraton Hotel were Swedish minister for Public Administration and Housing, Stefan Attefall; State Secretary to the Minister […]

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

Erdoğan planning to stage another coup in bid to eradicate remaining dissidents, columnist claims

Third suspicious disappearance in a week: Teacher dismissed in post-coup crackdown not seen for 14 days

Rumi Forum to bestow Peace and Dialogue Awards

Turkish schools in Somalia won 22 medals in 2 years

NY Times Editorial Board: Mr. Erdogan’s Reckless Revenge

UK acknowledges being a Gülen sympathizer in Turkey may be grounds for asylum

Panicky parents calmed over Feza Schools closure reports

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News