I Weep For Turkey

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses his supporters at the parliament in Ankara, Turkey / Photo: AP
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses his supporters at the parliament in Ankara, Turkey / Photo: AP


Date posted: August 20, 2016

CAMEL YIGIT

It has been the same topic of discourse everywhere. And it won’t stop anytime soon because of the atrocities that have followed, all in the name of sanitising the country and arresting masterminds of the phantom coup. The news coming out of Turkey has been really disturbing to many, and equally baffling to the world.

President Erdogan has obviously lost his sense of humanity. He has vowed to wipe out all participants of the Hizmet movement in Turkey and on the face of the earth. And he has started with the closure of schools, hospitals, universities, newspaper houses, charity organisations, orphanages and anything that is linked to the Hizmet movement regardless of the services these individuals and institutions are providing for the Turkish society.

What most people haven’t realised or refused to acknowledge is the fact that President Erdogan started to target the Hizmet movement after the corruption scandal in 2013. He closed newspaper houses associated with the movement, he arrested scores of people, but he had some limitations because of the compliance to the European Convention on Human Rights—an international treaty ratified by Turkey that protects human rights and fundamental freedoms.

And a plan was hatched. And the constitution was suspended via the declaration of a state of emergency and the witch-hunt has been massive. The figures are mind-boggling and the question is if the number of people that have been so far arrested and killed could be behind a coup, why did the coup fail? And I beg to ask some questions. How can a 75-year-old man plan a coup when he has been out of circulation for the last 17 years and living a recluse life in a small neighbourhood in the United States? What is the antecedent of Fethullah Gulen? And have there been instances where members of the Hizmet movement have ever been violent or taken to the streets to protest under whatever guise or form in its history? The answer to these questions should invoke some level of emotions in people because a greater genocide is happening in Turkey.

In his reaction to the allegations, Fethullah Gulen wrote a strong-worded letter and appealed to the international community to carry out an investigation and he would subject himself to whatever outcome that is reached. Please permit me to quote a section here: “I have been living a reclusive life in self-exile in a small town in the United States for the last 17 years. The assertion that I convinced the eighth largest army in the world – from 6,000 miles away – to act against its own government is not only baseless, it is false, and has not resonated throughout the world.”

“If there are any officers among the coup plotters who consider themselves as a sympathiser of Hizmet movement, in my opinion, those people committed treason against the unity of their country by taking part in an event where their own citizens lost their lives. They also violated the values that I have cherished throughout my life, and caused hundreds of thousands of innocent people to suffer under the government’s oppressive treatment.”

“Hizmet movement participants have not been involved in one single violent incident throughout its 50-year history. They haven’t even taken to the streets to confront Turkish security forces while they have been suffering under the government’s “witch hunt,” to use Mr. Erdoğan’s own words, for the last three years.”

“Despite being subjected to a smear campaign and suffering under a state oppression for the last three years in the hands of a politically controlled law enforcement and the judiciary, Hizmet movement participants have complied with the law, opposed injustices through legitimate means and only defended their rights within the legal framework”

I do weep for Turkey because how can you justify under whatever guise the shutting down of about 1061 schools and dormitories and well over 35 hospitals that included dialysis centres, just because they belong to participants of the Hizmet movement? Are the Hizmet movement participants no longer humans or Turks? As it stands, President Erdogan, in his wisdom, has succeeded in doing two things; taking Turkey back some donkey years and sowed the seed of polarisation and discrimination in the Turkish society because with the way things are, it’s no longer about Turkey but about consolidating power, not minding whose ox is gored.

Of course, there would be future implications, in my opinion, the stigmatisation, and demonisation won’t disappear anytime soon. It will live with us for a while and it won’t, in any way, advance the interest of our dear country, rather it would threaten the very foundation of social cohesion. And just like the popular saying ‘United we stand and Divided we Fall’. This saying is very relevant in Turkey as things stand. We need to be united more than ever. The dehumanisation and demonisation must be discontinued. The unnecessary clampdown and closure of schools and hospitals must stop. The licenses of teachers that were revoked should be restored, those being held in concentration camps must be released without conditions, and properties of Hizmet movement participants that were confiscated or destroyed should be repaired or replaced.

And on a final note, the Hizmet movement is not a terrorist organisation and would never be because Terrorism, according to various definitions is the “use or threatened use of violence (terror) in order to achieve a political, religious, or ideological aim.” It is important to note that the movement does not have a central ruling body or memberships. Anyone who reads and listens to Fethullah Gulen’s self-development books and cassettes can simply choose to “subscribe” to the movement and invest themselves in various initiatives as long as they are in line with the ideals of Hizmet that emphasises the establishment of schools in order to create a highly educated generation, encouraging this idealist generation to improve themselves and become productive members of their respective social circles, promoting multiculturalism and coexistence by connecting with community leaders, and all open-minded people, and encouraging the Muslim world to embrace and practice democratic values, which will help strike down sectarian and political barriers.

Source: LEADERSHIP , Aug 19, 2016


Related News

Fethullah Gulen Cited among Watkins’ 2019 the Most Spiritually Influential 100 Living People

There are several factors that were taken into account when compiling the list. The person has to have made a unique and spiritual contribution on a global scale, has to be alive, is frequently googled, appears in Nielsen Data, has a Wikipedia page, and is actively talked about throughout the Internet. This list is meant to celebrate the positive influence of today’s spiritual teachers.

MGK plan in action

A National Security Council (MGK) plan — dated Aug. 24, 2004, titled the “Plan to Crack Down on the Fethullah Gülen Group in Turkey” and undersigned by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, ministers and military commanders of the time — is already being implemented. Though the government claims it was not put into action, there are several indications to suggest that the MGK plan is in effect.

Erdogan drags Turkey toward totalitarianism

Though the attempt ultimately failed, its aftermath and the president’s swift response have the potential fundamentally to shape Turkey’s future as a democratic nation. The all-encompassing, repressive nature of these actions is deeply worrying. All signs point to Erdogan seizing on the opportunity provided by the attempted insurrection, using it as justification to fully consolidate his power over Turkey.

Fethullah Gülen: “Disbelief may prevail, but tyranny will not” (Interview in Asharq Al-Awsat-II)

As [Sunni scholar] Bediüzzaman Said Nursi aptly noted, we should combat the arch-enemies of the Umma (the Islamic community)—namely ignorance, poverty and disunity—with reasonable middle- and long-term projects for promoting education, science, art, trade, democracy, human rights, women’s empowerment, tolerance and dialogue. Any quest for democracy may fail if it does not stand on a firm foundation. The Hizmet Movement has long been trying to do this. with schools, universities, business associations, charitable foundations, dialogue institutions and media outlets.

Slandering Turkish schools is treason according to well-known politician

In an interview with the Cihan news agency, Durak showed reaction to Erdoğan’s order to the ambassadors and he visited some of the Turkish schools in foreign countries. “Children of prime ministers and presidents and high-level bureaucrats are sent to these schools opened in Africa and many parts of the world… Many significant people are given education in these schools. I am of the opinion denouncing these schools to the ambassadors instead of supporting them is equal to treason,” said Durak.

Failed coup in Turkey hits Albany’s Turkish Cultural Center

A failed military coup in Turkey in July continues to reverberate locally with the layoff of the only paid employee at the Turkish Cultural Center of Albany and cuts in its programs, which include language and cooking classes.

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

Grand stage shows by Turkish Olympiad students enthrall İzmir locals

Hizmet, Erdoğan and the US

Criminal complaint filed against media organizations publishing Gülen’s speeches

Japanese journalists express concern over Turkish gov’t pressure on critical media

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

First Documentary on the Hizmet Movement

Gov’t lifts confidentiality of MGK docs for publishing in partisan press

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News