A word on the power of the Fethullah Gulen-followers


Date posted: February 17, 2012

HASAN CEMAL

I am a person who knows the power of the Gülen Community (the “Cemaat”), or as the colloquial phrase goes, the Fethullahians or Fethullah-followers, very well.

I can easily say they are both powerful and competent.

How do I know that?

Because of football.

Yes, that is so. They are very well organized abroad. I was watching the European Football Championship in Austria and Switzerland in 2008. Turkey was in semi finals; we were going to play against Germany in Basel. All the hotels and pensions were booked, and I could not find a place to stay. I called a colleague from the community and explained my situation. Before long my phone rang, he was able to find a place for me to stay in Basel in a couple of hours.

Can the community capture the state in this country? Is there such an intention? I do not know, but I think the odds are slim. I don’t even think the community has or will have the power to capture the state.

 

The people I know from the community are people who have generally adopted democracy. What is important for them is to reach peace and serenity by accepting democracy and the rule of law as the joint platform.

In 2010, I was in South Africa, watching the World Cup. One of the important games was in Durban; the other was in Cape Town. Again there were no rooms available. I got in touch with the community once again, and in the end they were able to host me, as in Basel, in the dormitory of a Gülen school.
How else do I know of the power of the community?

It might also give an idea of the power of the community that some top businessmen visit Fethullah Hodja in the United States from time to time. I also met Fethullah Hodja at the beginning of the 1990s, and witnessed his conversations in different environments. In those conversations he mostly focused on tolerance, dialogue and reconciliation. I was impressed by some of his ideas and his peaceful stance; I have written about this atmosphere positively.

From the community, I know mostly journalists. They make good newspapers, and there are serious newspapers among them. I contact those journalists who I know are from the community when I visit capitals around the world.

The community is also involved in the business world, as well as education and universities.
What about the judiciary and the police? There is not much doubt the community has become very powerful, especially in the judiciary and the police, and has been very influential at certain critical points. It is known that they have undertaken very effective roles in the weakening of “military tutelage” – in other words in the Ergenekon and Balyoz (Sledgehammer) cases – for better or for worse.

The Fethullah-followers in the judiciary and the police have played another critical – and I think wrong – role in the Kurdish issue and the PKK matter, with the recent KCK operations, extending to the “National Intelligence Organization (MİT) incident.” The KCK is the Kurdistan Communities Union, the alleged urban wing of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Yes, that was wrong.

But, do these interrogations constitute a “judicial coup attempt” against Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan?

This is an exaggerated viewpoint. It involves too much conspiracy. However, isn’t it true that the power of the community in the state, especially in the judiciary and police, bothers the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Parti) and Prime Minister Erdoğan?
It does, all along the line.

Didn’t some developments in the Balyoz case, or the İlker Başbuğ incident, bother Erdoğan?
No doubt they did.

Did Erdoğan underline the community’s presence in parliament under the AK Parti umbrella during the last general elections? He did, and in a serious way.

It is a fact that the community cannot take Erdoðan down, they don’t have such power. Moreover, the community would not want to fight with the government, with Erdoğan.

On the other hand, the community regards Erdoğan as inadequate in some respects and criticizes him. The community does not opt for a “fight,” especially with “the state.” This stance is not new. It goes back to the past – to Sept. 12, to Feb. 28.

Can the community capture the state in this country? Is there such an intention? I do not know, but I think the odds are slim. I don’t even think the community has or will have the power to capture the state.

The people I know from the community are people who have generally adopted democracy. What is important for them is to reach peace and serenity by accepting democracy and the rule of law as the joint platform.

Hasan Cemal is a columnist for daily Milliyet in which this piece appeared on Feb. 16. It was translated into English by the Daily News staff.

Source: Hurriyet Daily News , February 17, 2012


Related News

What is this bedlam all about?

So, as expected, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan declared all-out war. The enemy — what he and his advisers regard as “the junta formation within the police,” the media, the judiciary, the American Embassy, affiliates of the mainly volunteer Hizmet movement, and, well, whoever seems to disagree with the way he intends to run the country and whoever tends to believe there is no smoke without fire — have dug their trenches in a circle.

Tension should be reduced

Both sides [Hizmet movement and the AK Party government] see this rift as a matter of life and death. If you are in a struggle for existence, you do your best to attack the other side, but by doing so, you make mistakes, damage yourself and the other side.

Australian Catholic University Gulen Chair Launch

Australian Intercultural Society (AIS), in partnership with the Australian Catholic University (ACU) celebrated the appointment of Associate Professor Salih Yucelto the Fethullah Gülen Chair in the study of Islam and Muslim – Catholic Relations.

Turkish imam in Copenhagen says embassy spied on 4 people, 14 schools

A religious adviser to the Turkish embassy in Copenhagen, Adnan Bülent Baloğlu told a local paper that the Turkish outpost has collected information on “4 individuals and 14 schools” affiliated with the Gulen movement in Denmark.

Gülen underlines values, rejects alliance with political party or leader

In response to a question on whether “the alliance” between the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and the Hizmet movement had ended, Gülen said, “If we can talk about an alliance, it was around [the] shared values of democracy, universal human rights and freedoms — never for political parties or candidates.”

Turkish Language Olympics – Iraq Qualifications

Excitement has begun for the Turkish Language Olympics, the pride of Turkey. The Iraq qualifications for the Turkish Language Olympics has been held in Viranşehir, Şanlıurfa. 30 students from the Turkish schools in the north of Iraq left the audience at the Viranşehir Indoor Hall awestruck with the rendition they came up with. The night […]

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

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

In Case You Missed It

Winds of friendship were enjoyed in different parts of Turkey during the month of Muharram

Erdoğan: both asset and liability for AKP

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

Hizmet Movement: Partners We Want

Turkish schools building peace in Africa

The Guardian view on the week in Turkey: coup – and counter-coup?

Pregnant female judge held in prison in dire conditions speaks out

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News