Turkey’s Gulen crackdown hits Canada

Kenan Guvercin, 5, and his mother, Maila Abenoja, leave the Nile Academy, a private Gulan school in Toronto which representatives of the Turkish government are trying to force to close.
(Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail)
Kenan Guvercin, 5, and his mother, Maila Abenoja, leave the Nile Academy, a private Gulan school in Toronto which representatives of the Turkish government are trying to force to close. (Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail)


Date posted: October 1, 2016

Patrick Martin

A crackdown on Gulen followers in Turkey has spilled into Canada, creating a deep divide in the Turkish community in this country.

A delegation from Turkey recently visited Canada to urge the closing of the Nile Academy, a private Toronto school that follows the teachings of Fethullah Gulen, a 75-year-old preacher whom Turkish officials accuse of masterminding an attempted coup d’état on July 15. Enrolment at the school has plummeted – down to 300 students from 500.

Efforts in Canada by Turkish authorities and supporters of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have made life miserable for Gulen followers here, many say.

They have been made unwelcome in mosques and restaurants frequented by Turkish-Canadians, and they have been cursed and protested against by fellow citizens.

In Turkey, hundreds of Gulen schools have been shut down, and thousands of people have been rounded up, dismissed from positions in the military, police, judiciary and other government offices. The arrests include two Canadians with dual citizenship who are still being held in Turkey.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau raised their cases on the sideline of September’s G20 summit, telling Turkish officials that he hoped the men would at least receive consular visits from Canadian representatives.

Many Turkish-Canadians are feeling frightened these days.

“Good,” said Erdeniz Sen, Turkey’s consul-general in Toronto, who has visited several mosques and community centres in southern Ontario sounding the alarm against what he calls the “Gulen terrorist organization.”

“They [the Gulenists] tried to overthrow the democratically elected government of Turkey. That’s unforgivable,” Mr. Sen said.

But Mr. Gulen denies involvement in the attempted July putsch that lasted but a few hours and left more than 200 dead. The elderly preacher left his native Turkey in 1999 to live in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania after running afoul of previous anti-Islamic regimes.

An author and former imam, Mr. Gulen began an educational movement known as Hizmet in the 1960s. His writings emphasize not Islam, as many assume, but the importance of education and the value of cultural diversity. The success of his schools in turning out highly educated graduates allowed the movement to spread outside Turkey to several other countries, including Canada.

The Turkish government is looking to Canada and the U.S. for extradition of Mr. Gulen and his supporters but without luck so far. The tension has enveloped at least two Canadian families.

This summer, Davud Hanci, a Muslim chaplain working at federal correctional institutions in the Calgary area, was visiting family in northeastern Turkey with his wife, Rumeysa, and their two children, 8 and 9. On Aug. 2, Turkish authorities came for Mr. Hanci. The family was staying at the home of an uncle but police knew where to find them. They handcuffed Mr. Hanci and took his Canadian passport and Turkish ID. “The children were terrified,” Ms. Hanci said.

“My husband is a gentle man,” she said. “He is opposed to violence. But the local [Turkish] papers ran his picture and said he was an organizer of the coup. It is not true.”

Mr. Hanci remains in custody and his wife, who has since returned to Canada, has not heard from him since his arrest.

A similar nightmare happened to another Turkish-Canadian, Ilhan Erdem. He was also visiting Turkey with his wife, Hatice, and their two children, 9 and 9 months. The coup attempt delayed their return flight. When they tried to leave on July 25, Mr. Erdem was arrested at the airport in Istanbul.

“They tore all of our luggage apart,” Ms. Erdem said. “They have no right to do this to my family.”

She returned to Canada with the children and tried to arrange a lawyer for her husband.

Canadian consular officials were denied permission to see Mr. Erdem, a common occurrence when a country does not recognize a prisoner’s dual Turkish-Canadian citizenship.

Ms. Erdem eventually found a lawyer who learned that Mr. Erdem had already been tried and found guilty of being a leading member of the coup organizers.

“My husband is innocent,” Ms. Erdem insisted. “Fifteen years in Canada and he’s not even had a parking ticket.”

Other Canadians, who were not in Turkey at the time of the coup, are feeling unease.

One person in Montreal associated with a Gulen organization described how a visibly angry man came to his door one evening to tell him to take down the Turkish flag at the front of his house; that he was a traitor and had no right to wave it.

“When I turned on the recorder in my cellphone [to record the man’s abusive behaviour], he tried to grab it from me and we scuffled,” said the Gulen follower who insisted, as did many of the people interviewed, that his name not be revealed for fear of further repercussions.

“This is a small community,” the victimized man said, referring to Montreal’s Turkish community. “They know who we [the Gulen followers] are. It’s all very unsettling.”

In Ottawa in September, several dozen pro-Erdogan protesters, many bused in from Toronto, turned up at the annual Turkish festival put on by the local Gulen organization. Police kept the protest group at bay, but the placards and shouting denouncing the Gulen followers as terrorists disrupted the spirit of the event.

A number of Turkish academics, who were visiting Canada at the time of the coup, said they dare not return home because they teach at a Gulen-funded institution. They will stay as long as their visas allow and may seek refugee status after that.

Lorne Waldman, a Toronto immigration lawyer, has handled close to 20 cases of Turks stranded in Canada who have sought asylum since the July 15 coup. “Not one has been refused,” he said. “The Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada takes it as a given that Turks affiliated with Gulen will be at risk if they return to Turkey.”

At Mustafa’s restaurant in Toronto, one of the Turkish community’s most popular eateries, the owner said that people are coping. He estimated that “about 80 per cent of the community” sides with the current Turkish government and they continue to eat at his establishment.

What about the other 20 per cent?

“It’s better if they stay away,” he said.

Source: The Globe and Mail , September 30, 2016


Related News

Parents of Afghan-Turk school students vow to defend school in Mazar-e Sharif to the end

The Parents’ Committee of an Afghan-Turk school held a press conference on Wednesday in the conference hall of Ariana Boys High School in Mazar-e Sharif and vowed to defend to the end the school against the attacks of the Turkish government.

Gulen blasts ‘despicable’ 2016 Turkey coup bid, subsequent ‘witch hunt’

US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, the man blamed by Turkey for a failed coup attempt a year ago, on Friday again denied any involvement in what he called a “despicable putsch,” and called on Ankara to end its “witch hunt” of his followers.

EU calls on Turkey to Investigate abduction cases targeting Gülen Movement

The European Union (EU) on Thursday said it was closely following developments in Turkey including the abductions of people from the Gülen movement, reminding Ankara of its responsibility to investigate these reported cases.

Jews, Muslims Bond Over Shared Values

Rabbi Rachel Kahn-Troster, Rabbis for Human Rights: “We have to understand that we have common issues in our communities that we can work together to improve our schools, we can work together for immigration reform and that these are issues of shared concern that are things we feel passionately about.” Rabbi Rachel Kahn-Troster believes that […]

Jailed journalist facing new trial for not calling Gülen movement a terror organization

Journalist Emre Soncan, who has been behind bars for 20 months, is facing a new trial for not describing the Gülen movement as a terrorist organization. Soncan, 36, used to work for Turkey’s best-selling Zaman daily, which was closed down by the Turkish government in the aftermath of a failed coup attempt on July 15, 2016 due to its links to the Gülen movement.

People Of All Faiths Come Together For The Library’s Muslim Journeys

Ben Burdick  “Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it.” —Rumi This fall, the Lakewood Public Library will be hosting a series of programs that will bring to light the cultural, historical and spiritual lives of Muslims in […]

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

Afghan official lauds Turkey’s education drive

Brazil court orders release of Gulen-linked businessman accused by Ankara of terrorism

An Interview with Fethullah Gülen

Kimse Yok Mu extends help to refugees trying to reach Europe

Graduation ceremony of Pak-Turk school held

Kimse Yok Mu awarded in Davos

Erdogan at UN urges global action against preacher

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News