Gülen’s views, concern for Kurdish problem nothing new, report shows


Date posted: November 16, 2011

16 November 2011, Wednesday / TODAY’S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

Contrary to claims that renowned Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has only just begun to put forward some proposals for the solution of Turkey’s long-standing Kurdish question, a collection of works published in this week’s Aksiyon magazine demonstrates that Gülen has been voicing his views and proposals on the subject since the early 1990s.

In a speech broadcast on the herkul.org website in late October, Gülen expressed his grief over the deaths of dozens of security members in terrorist attacks in the country’s Southeast while expressing his views about what measures should be taken for the peaceful resolution of the Kurdish and terrorism problem.

In his speech, Gülen said there should be courses on Kurdish in Turkey’s schools. “Even schools in the United States offer Turkish as an elective course. Why isn’t Kurdish offered as an elective course in [Turkish] schools?” he asked.

Gülen said it is impossible to achieve a goal through violence or by killing people. Using the life of the Prophet Muhammad as an example, as someone who did not cause the slightest harm to the people who oppressed him during his early years as a prophet in Mecca, Gülen said the people of the Southeast should be informed about this spirit of humanity, so that young people can be prevented from joining the ranks of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

“No matter who does it, it is just brutality, murder and tyranny to try to achieve a goal by killing people [and] shedding blood. No beneficial goal can be achieved for humanity through the use of these tactics,” he added.

The Islamic scholar also warned against provocations, and said the terrorism problem cannot be resolved through chanting slogans or shouting.

Following these statements from Gülen, some circles close to the outlawed PKK and Kurdish Communities Union (KCK) launched a defamation campaign against Gülen, misinterpreting his statements as though he were calling for the use of violence against the people of the Southeast, while others interpreted his remarks on the Kurdish issue as being something completely new. A closer look at Gülen’s speeches, books and sermons from the 1990s until today reveals that the Islamic scholar has long been looking for ways to resolve this, Turkey’s most pressing problem.

In an interview with the Zaman daily on Sept. 3, 1997, Gülen said it would be wrong and unfair to attribute the terrorism problem to the people of the country’s Southeast, while noting that fighting terrorism only through the use of force is not productive.

“The state has soldiers there. The military does the things that can be done through the use of force. It is not possible to find reasonable and real solutions to the problems only through the use of force. It is very rare that people who use force can use their sense of judgment correctly,” he said. In the same interview, Gülen also proposed giving several extra points to students from the Southeast who want to study at a university, as a form of affirmative action.

In a speech in 2005, Gülen said it would be wrong to make a distinction between Turks and Kurds in Turkey, as Turks and Kurds have shared the same fate, pains and joys throughout history.

In his book titled “Kırık Testi 5” (Broken Pot 5) published in 2005, Gülen warned that resorting to illegitimate means to fight terrorism in the state’s name would only lead to more problems and turmoil in the country. “The state can fight terrorists; its security forces can kill those who open fire on them in this war because a war has its own rules. However, if a person surrenders to the security forces, the state can never execute him or her without trial. Killing a person who surrenders is against the law. However, unfortunately, there are people in this country who say: ‘I killed the people I was ordered to kill for the order, peace and safety of the state’,” he wrote.

In another speech broadcast in 2007 on the herkul.org website, Gülen talked about the importance of showing love for the people of the Southeast via actions, not only in words. “It is very easy to approach the people of the Southeast with epic statements and say ‘we are all brothers and sisters’ on TV, or on the radio, or in newspapers. … The heroic people of Anatolia have to convince their sisters and brothers living in misery in the Southeast and the East how great their love for them is. People from the West will go to the East and vice versa and they will establish strong relationships with each other. In this way, each group will see the situation of the other. The people of that region are big-hearted,” he said.

Source: Today’s Zaman http://www.todayszaman.com/news-263069-gulens-views-concern-for-kurdish-problem-nothing-new-report-shows.html


Related News

Why Erdogan Is Soft On ISIS

Turkey’s government and the media that support it have an odd attitude when it comes to violent acts carried out by ISIS: It’s as if the “cultural/ideological dialects” of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) government somehow malfunction. The government is politically accountable if ISIS actions do not stop in Turkey. Trying to cover this up with nonsense like “ISIS is the same as PKK and the Gülenists” only increases this accountability.

Gülen’s lawyer dismisses wiretapping claims

In his statement, Gülen’s lawyer Albayrak said the allegations which appeared in some newspapers is totally baseless and targets Gülen in an unfair way and demands punishment for the individuals who were involved such accusations

Kimse Yok Mu extends a helping hand to thousands of Guineans

The Guinean minister for social action, women and children Sanaba Kaba was also present in the aid distribution event.

The Encyclopedia of Islam and hate speech

Erdoğan’s obvious target was Fethullah Gülen, but it is clear that he also attacked anyone who doesn’t think like him with phrases such as “false prophets,” “fake mystics” and “so-called scholars.” This denigration is problematic especially in terms of secularism. Indeed, the prime minister hurls gross insults at religious interpretations that diverge from his own. In his capacity as a prime minister, he imposes his beliefs and acts onto those who do not think like him. One step beyond these remarks would be the prime minister’s supporters’ resorting to violence against those he places on the bull’s eye.

First Documentary on the Hizmet Movement

By Tasmin Mahfuz At the SVA theatre in New York City, the Peace Islands Institute sponsored an exclusive screening of the award-winning documentary, “Love is a Verb.” Director Terry Spencer Hesser started the film three years ago when she was working on a travel series for PBS. The film takes viewers on a journey to […]

Ambassadors uneasy over Erdoğan’s orders concerning graft probe

Turkey’s ambassadors have expressed displeasure over Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s remarks that called on them to “tell the truth” to their foreign interlocutors, saying that defending the government against corruption allegations in not the ambassadors’ business.

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

Hizmet and current political debates in Turkey

Opposition asks for parliamentary session on MİT wiretapping

Islamic scholar Gülen files libel case against PM Erdoğan

Uplifting Romanian children in need

Turkish schools important for northern Iraq’s future

Erdoğan’s propagandist think tanks

Children from all over the world embarked on Turkish voyage

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News