Hizmet Movement NGOs from 80 nations share intercultural experiences at GYV meeting

UN Resident Coordinator in Turkey Shahid Najam was one of the speakers at Thursday’s Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV) conference in İstanbul. (Photo: Today's Zaman)
UN Resident Coordinator in Turkey Shahid Najam was one of the speakers at Thursday’s Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV) conference in İstanbul. (Photo: Today's Zaman)


Date posted: October 13, 2012

İPEK ÜZÜM, İSTANBUL

Representatives of Turkish-run nongovernmental organizations from 80 countries, established by people inspired by Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen’s teachings, have shared their experiences of intercultural and interfaith dialogue during a three-day meeting organized by the Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV).

İstanbul hosted the “Second* International Experience Sharing Conference of Coexistence,” attended by Hizmet Movement NGOs from 80 countries along with many businessmen, journalists and representatives of Turkish nongovernmental organizations. Representatives from various NGOs showed video presentations about the activities they conduct in their countries to promote intercultural or interfaith dialogue. The importance of establishing dialogue with people from different cultures, races, languages or religions was promoted during the GYV meeting.

GYV President Mustafa Yeşil delivered the opening speech at the meeting, highlighting the importance of dialogue, saying the word is frequently used in Turkey but that its meaning is not fully comprehended. “In fact, we are currently experiencing a time in which we urgently need actual dialogue, not just talking about the word itself. We [referring to all representatives of the Hizmet movement, which includes followers of Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen’s principles] have never used the concept of dialogue for intentions such as bringing anybody into the fold or persuading anybody to adopt our religion and we have never used it within any strategy at all,” Yeşil said. “Dialogue is a concept and a lifestyle. We have never given up our values while establishing dialogue with any person and we have also not wanted people to abandon their own values. We just tried to understand opposing values and ideas, we got the chance to introduce ourselves and then we met, we reached a compromise, we banded together and waled together.”

Yeşil said the public has been acquainted with the Hizmet movement for 40 years. “Hizmet is an education and human-based movement that emerged between 1991 and 1992 in the country and was institutionalized abroad in 2000. It runs nongovernmental organizations in around 140 countries. The movement is based on intercultural dialogue and cohabitation in peace,” Yeşil noted.

The UN’s resident coordinator in Turkey, Shahid Najam, who also delivered a speech during the meeting, praised the GYV and congratulated the association for its new NGO status as an affiliate of the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), adding: “The wide spectrum of issues of global, regional and national significance, which the association engages in and promotes dialogue on is indeed commendable and will definitely enrich the global knowledge, exchange good practices and strive at consensus building — a goal which the contemporary world needs to achieve on an urgent basis given the enormity of challenges, chaos, disorder and dissensions afflicting the world.”

Stating that the aim for establishing a global dialogue constitutes an important part of UN policies, Najam said: “The United Nations mandate derives from three main pillars — international peace and security, development with equity, and respect for human rights and dignity. All three are inextricably interrelated and constitute the core of the topic we are discussing today. It is engraved in the UN Charter and in several UN resolutions and declarations.”

‘Turkey widely acknowledged as land of tolerance’

Stating that Turkey historically represents an amalgam of East and West, a blend of civilizations, and is widely acknowledged as a land of tolerance, Najam said that Turkey is a testimony of peoples living together throughout the ages and inspires many nations in their quest to achieve a democratic, coherent and just social order.

Noting that the world’s problems, such as violence, racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia and hate crimes, all stem from intolerance, Najam said: “No matter how pessimistic the landscape may seem, it is our foremost obligation to respond proactively to the tensions and work collectively to replace instability with stability, hostility with hospitality, and animosity with alliance. In this regard, allow me to once again recognize the laudable efforts of the Writers and Journalists Association for this genuine intercultural engagement through this forum for peaceful coexistence.” He added: “We should remember that tolerance is liberating; it does not mean indifference or simply recognition. It is an act, whereby not only the differences of others are recognized but also the riches of other cultures are valued as the wealth of all. Mutual respect serves as a moral compass to ensure inclusiveness. Likewise, tolerance empowers individuals, frees communities and provides the foundation for genuine peaceful coexistence.”

Ethem Sancak, chairman of the Hedef Alliance Group, praised Turkish schools run by private entrepreneurs around the world and described members of the Hizmet movement, who are trying to spread inter-cultural dialogue around the world with their peace-based activities at Turkish schools, as “Alperenler” (brave men) who promote tolerance and mutual understanding across the world.

The Niagara Foundation, which operates in nine US states with 52 branches in the country, gave a presentation to show the activities they conduct to establish intercultural and interfaith dialogue in the US. In the presentation, the foundation highlighted their numerous events to promote dialogue between Armenian and Turks in the US, two communities that have had long-standing problems with each other for over a century. A great applause erupted when a friend of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, who was fatally shot outside the Agos weekly’s office in İstanbul in 2007, said during an interview on the video, “If Hrant were alive, he would also want to solve all the problems together.”

Also at the meeting, a student from Afghanistan, a country that has suffered from civil wars and violence for many years, said the Afghan people did not know whether people can coexist and understand each other by establishing dialogue, but the Afghans learned the importance of dialogue and mutual understanding thanks to their teachers working in private Turkish schools in their country.

Turkish-run nongovernmental organizations of 10 countries out of the 80 countries that attended prepared short video presentations that were shown during the meeting.

Source: Today’s Zaman 12 October 2012

* First Meeting’s Link


Related News

2014: a difficult year?

Turkey’s political life has entered a zone of turbulence. Some people were already accusing the governing team of being time worn, which is only normal after 11 consecutive years in power.

Pacifica Institute Utah hosts ‘Love is a Verb’ screening for interfaith season

Pacifica Institute Utah sponsored a screening of the film “Love is a Verb” on Monday, Feb. 23, at the Salt Lake City Library as part of Interfaith Season sponsored by the Salt Lake Interfaith Roundtable.

The Gülen Movement: Paradigms, Projects and Aspirations

Gülen movement could be compared with Gandhi and his movement of nonviolent resistance. Of course, the context of both figures is very different. However, the scope of their influence is not dissimilar. What both have shared is the capacity to bring hope and to enable others to find hope.

Ramadan Feast: Community Bonding at Its Best from the Turkish Cultural Center

Dignitaries, clergy, and everyday citizens, Jews, Christians and Muslims gathered Thursday night at Tarrytown’s DoubleTree Hotel by the invite of the Turkish Cultural Center for a Ramadan dinner, speeches, and entertainment. State Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins praised the far-reaching outreach and inclusivity of this group and the peacefulness of their mission.

Journalists and Writers Foundation at UN ECOSOC annual meeting

Journalists and Writers Foundation attended UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) annual meeting, in attendance of which were ambassadors, ministers or other senior officials of UN member countries, in Geneva. In his speech at the meeting, JWF’s Abant Platform Secretary General Huseyin Hurmali detailed on the contributions of the educational institutions inspired by JWF Honorary President Fethullah Gulen to sustainable development, promoting education, pluralism and peace building.

Alliance for Shared Values Deplores Paris Shootings

The Alliance for Shared Values condemns in the strongest terms the terrorist attack on French magazine Charlie Hebdo. Such horrific actions represent an assault on democratic values and can never be justified no matter the underlying reason. Even against insults, the befitting response must be legal and civil.

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

Turkey jails teacher to pressure husband into ‘confessing’

Inspectors finds no flaw in Kimse Yok Mu activities

The mosque-cemevi project and the settlement process

Hizmet: a social movement or political manipulation?

American students volunteer for Kimse Yok Mu aid campaign

Theologians: Lies, slander and defamation is unislamic

Kimse Yok Mu: A charity with a difference

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News