Saylorsburg protesters focus on Turkish cleric


Date posted: January 1, 2014

JENNA EBERSOLE

As a corruption investigation embroils the prime minister of Turkey and the country’s ruling party, protesters descended for a third time on Saylorsburg against Turkish cleric Fethullah Gülen.

Gülen has lived at the Golden Generation Worship and Retreat Center in Saylorsburg for more than a decade, but remains mostly unknown to Americans. For Turks, he is a prominent figure who many believe promotes education and a moderate, peaceful form of Islam.

Gülen and the large movement he inspired remain at the center of discussion about Turkish politics, though his followers say he is non-political.

In the last few weeks in Turkey, an extensive scandal has engulfed Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.The Associated Press reports that revelations of bribery and illicit money transfers to Iran are threatening Erdogan and his government.

Ties between Gülen’s movement and Erdogan have been broken, with conspiracy theories pointing to the Gülen as the force behind the investigation, the AP reports. Though the evidence for Gülen’s involvement in the investigation is weak, his movement’s influence in the country seems clear.

When protesters arrived at the Gülen center last summer from across the U.S., many said they believed Gülen is the puppet-master behind Erdogan.

Saturday afternoon, first in Brodheadsville then at Ross Township’s Van Buskirk-Haney Park, about 40 protesters said they organized for the third time because of the scandal. Although the investigation appears to divide the two figures, they claimed it is little more than a power struggle between them.

“That’s the reason we want them to go together, because they are both dangerous movements for Turkey,” protest organizer Armagan Yilaz said through translator Banu Saker.

“They are both on the same side,” added Saker, who came from Virginia.

Protesters carried a makeshift coffin with photos of Erdogan and Gülen, singing and chanting throughout the peaceful protest.

But Alp Aslandogan, spokesman for Gülen’s movement, said the protesters’ views are contradictory. He said Erdogan has blamed Gülen for the investigation, so protesters are supporting the ruling party by protesting Gülen now.

“Their action aligns them with them, although their rhetoric is against them,” he said Saturday.

Aslandogan said the scandal is not a power struggle between the two figures, but rather an example of corruption properly coming to light.

“He definitely supports the values of government transparency and accountability, and checks and balances in the government,” Aslandogan said of Gülen.

Gülen followers are among others who support democratic reforms, and the cleric never endorsed Erdogan but rather shared common views at a time when the prime minister’s party preached democratic reforms, he said.

Aslandogan provided a link to an article apparently written by Yilmaz, which lists the U.S. among Turkey’s enemies. Yilmaz has denied the protests are anti-American, and said they are aimed at raising awareness about the Gülen movement’s activities, including its involvement in U.S. charter schools, among Americans.

Aslandogan also pointed to a section of the group’s Facebook page, which quotes from a blog that appears to praise Erdogan for standing “on Turkish soil with Turkish citizens who are fed up with Gülen’s influence and corruption.”

Still, Aslandogan said the center supports the right of the group to protest peacefully.

Protesters said they will continue to come to Saylorsburg as long as Gülen remains.

“We are just trying to warn the American people,” Saker said.

Source: Pocono Record , December 29, 2013


Related News

Enes Kanter Education Fund to award students with scholarship

Embrace Relief, in cooperation with Mr. Kanter, will be establishing a scholarship fund for new college freshmen. As many of you know, Embrace Relief is dedicated to assisting our local communities in need and helping those who are financially struggling.

Religions Come Together To Celebrate Unity Amid Tragedy

“Today is the highest Islamic holiday,” said Ismail Akbulut for the Multicultural Mosaic Foundation. “We are commemorating the story of Prophet Abraham when he was going to sacrifice his oldest son. Today we are getting together as cousins and celebrating this festival,” Akbulut added. “We have a future in this country together.”

Who staged a coup against whom on Dec. 17?

When its involvement in corruption and bribery became public, and that this seemed like the tip of an iceberg, the government thought that it must cover up the subsequent investigation, fearing that yet more investigations would be started — and so crushed the police force and the judiciary like a steamroller.

Why is the government freeing bloody murderers?

The government is continuing to act in panic. In the last couple of months, every single step it has taken has somehow been related to the graft probe, and they all are being taken to suffocate the corruption investigation. The government is freeing Ergenekon suspects willingly and on purpose to create an alliance against the so-called “parallel state,” as they call the movement inspired by Fethullah Gülen.

Gülen not only my hero, also a model for other religions

“He is not only my hero for what he has done for the Muslim societies but also [offers] a model for all other religions,” said Dirk Ficca, executive director of the Chicago-based Council for a Parliament of the World’s Religions.

Operation against whom?

A claim made this past weekend by Hüseyin Gülerce, a senior columnist for the Zaman daily, affiliated with the Gülen (Hizmet) movement, increased tensions in Ankara when he suggested that a major operation will be carried out by the government against the Gülen movement, which it believes to be behind the graft investigation.

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

Gülen says planned assassinations of prominent figures in Turkey could be blamed on him

How Nigerian Tulip International Colleges tracks pupils with math talent

Celebrating Ramadan with Turkish asylum seekers

International Festival of Language and Culture 2016

Cuban artist wins Kimse Yok Mu’s international cartoon competition

Hizmet Movement blog now available in Portuguese and Arabic

Texas Senate passes resolution commending Fethullah Gülen

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News