A Case for Why Gulen Would Never Support a Coup


Date posted: August 22, 2016

Anisa Hadžović

Fethullah Gulen is a 77-year old Turkish Muslim scholar who has been living in self-exile in Pennsylvania for the past two decades. His ideas are the source of influence for hundreds of thousands of people who were inspired by him to make the world a better place through education, ending poverty, and uniting people through common universal values. Gulen’s ideas started becoming popular in Turkey in the 1970’s. Those that were influenced by him began to establish schools, hospitals, charity organizations and other social development institutions in different parts of Turkey.

By the 90’s, such people, by then called Gulen-followers, were moving to different countries around the world (mostly poor countries at first). Initially they were only opening schools but later other institutions as well such as hospitals, charity organizations, interfaith dialogue centers and many other types of establishments to contribute to society.

Throughout all of these decades, Gulen’s ideas and ideals have never changed in their essence or in the ways they were carried out. Some 170 countries around the world, which all contain different types of Gulen-inspired establishments, are a witness to this truth. Gulen, whose ideas have Sufi roots as well, has always called for peaceful and grassroots type methods to better society.

To point the finger at Gulen for being the mastermind behind the coup in Turkey could not be farther from the truth. Gulen understands the verse from the Quran “killing one person is like killing all of humanity*” as a straightforward verse with no gray areas to it. The individual cannot be sacrificed for the “greater good.” In his statement after 9/11, Gulen used an analogy saying that if a ship contains nine criminals and one innocent person, that ship cannot be sunk according to Islam for the sake of the one innocent person. How could such a man give command to an army (if he could even have such access) to march down on streets full of civilians with war tanks and helicopters? Such an action would not only go against everything he has done and preached his whole life, but it would also finish the global movement he has inspired.

Although there is no direct link between Gulen and the works of his followers, a coup in Turkey that is affiliated with Gulen, whether successful or not, would directly affect them and their works, eventually leading to the movement’s demise. It is also important to note that Gulen himself has lived through 4 coups in Turkey during his lifetime and was even imprisoned during one of them. Seeing the effects of coups firsthand, he has always been categorically against them and supported the rule of democracy.

In his interview with the prominent French newspaper Le Monde, Gulen has called the July 15 events in Turkey a “terror coup.” As a man who has always condemned terrorism and violence in any shape or form, to which his life’s work is evidence, it is hard to believe that Gulen could have had the slightest connection to the coup.

*The Qur’an, Al-Maide 5.32

 


Related News

Erdogan – Turkey’s desperate president

There is a curious reluctance on the part of the Turkish government to carry out an in-depth investigation of the coup, but the blame has been put unequivocally on an erstwhile ally, Fethullah Gülen, a reclusive Turkish imam resident in Pennsylvania, and the cadres of his movement, which enabled Erdogan and the AKP to come to and hold power.

Irrationality rules

Nobody outside of Turkey understands why a government that claims to be innocent and portrays itself as the victim of dirty conspiracies uses every legal — and according to many illegal — means at its disposal to stop further investigations and punish those who gathered the evidence or wrote the indictments.

Burma/Thailand: Deported Turkish Man at Risk

Burma and Thailand flagrantly violated Furkan Sökmen’s human rights by caving in to pressure from Ankara and deporting him despite his claim for asylum and the real risk of ill-treatment and an unfair trial in Turkey.

The impact of corruption on elections

Yet, looking at the data in several recent surveys, including the AKP’s internal polling, the public does not seem to be buying the conspiracy theories any more, against the background of overwhelming evidence indicating massive wrongdoing in the government. The rushed decision by Erdoğan to reassign thousands of police officers and hundreds of prosecutors and judges as well as introducing controversial bills to reign in the judiciary have all reinforced the perception that Erdoğan and his people are deeply involved in corruption.

Gülen urges Hizmet members to defend prep schools in civilized way

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has urged followers of the Hizmet movement to insist on the “right and logical” and defend prep schools, which the Turkish government has said it will shut down despite tremendous public outrage. In a speech broadcast by herkul.org, a website that usually publishes his speeches, Gülen said not insisting on […]

Fethullah Gulen promotes democracy (CBS News)

Fethullah Gulen promotes tolerance, interfaith dialog, and above-all: he promotes education. And yet he’s a mystery man — he’s never seen or heard in public — and the more power he gains, the more questions are raised about his motives and the schools.

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

D.C. Group Holds Annual Peace and Dialogue Dinner in Albemarle

International Women’s Day Message from Fethullah Gülen

Abant Platform meeting launches with identity debates in Turkey

Woman detained over links to Gülen movement after giving birth

Minister Yazici Visits Turkish Schools in Yemen

Paralyzed by ill-treatment in Sivas prison, Turkish police officer dies at 33

Romanian Senate president inaugurates Turkish school in Romania

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News