Turks fleeing post-coup reprisals find shelter in Pittsburgh

Cetin Gul, 37, from Istanbul, Turkey, who supports the cleric Fethullah Gulen, pauses for a moment while talking about the controversy involving Gulen since the failed coup in Turkey at the Turkish Cultural Center in Banksville. (Photo by Lake Fong/Post-Gazette)
Cetin Gul, 37, from Istanbul, Turkey, who supports the cleric Fethullah Gulen, pauses for a moment while talking about the controversy involving Gulen since the failed coup in Turkey at the Turkish Cultural Center in Banksville. (Photo by Lake Fong/Post-Gazette)


Date posted: October 24, 2016

Peter Smith

Until this summer, Cetin Gul of Istanbul, Turkey, worked as a videographer for a company that did promotional work for clients that included a charity organization. That charity, Hizmet, is associated with the movement of Fethullah Gulen, a prominent Turkish Muslim leader living in self-imposed exile in Eastern Pennsylvania.

After a deadly and unsuccessful coup attempt by some in the Turkish military in July, the government blamed Mr. Gulen and began suppressing organizations associated with him.

Mr. Gul’s company closed, and he feared he would lose more than his job. Friends with government connections warned him he could soon end up in prison — as have tens of thousands of Mr. Gulen’s supporters.

“Because of the direct association with Hizmet, I was a direct target,” Mr. Gul said through a translator at the Turkish Cultural Center of Pittsburgh in Banksville.

Mr. Gul came to Pittsburgh in late summer on a tourist visa, leaving behind his new motorbike and most other possessions. Mr. Gul, a 37-year-old with a trimmed beard and long curly hair pulled back in a ponytail, is now trying to figure out his next steps.

He and about two-dozen other Turkish citizens have fled to the Pittsburgh area since July in fear of post-coup reprisals, some coming with their families, according to those helping them here. Throughout the United States and other countries, members of the Turkish diaspora are taking in people who have fled the country. Many are in America on tourist visas, giving them some breathing room as they consider whether to apply for asylum or to find a willing employer who would support a work-visa application.

Three men who fled Turkey spoke with a reporter at the Turkish Cultural Center of Pittsburgh, which runs regular cultural programs and is part of a network of centers around the country that are associated with the Gulen movement and staffed by its supporters. The other two men who recently arrived here asked not to be named for fear of reprisals against family members still in Turkey.

“All have come with only one suitcase and not much money,” said Bedrettin Tokgoz, executive director of the cultural center. “We are only expecting God’s grace to help us out of this situation.”

Turkey accuses Mr. Gulen, 75, who has lived in the Poconos since 1999, and his supporters within the military of fomenting the coup. The U.S. State Department says it is evaluating Turkey’s request for extradition.

Mr. Gulen strenuously denies involvement in the coup, as do his followers.

“If some people who appear to be sympathizers of Hizmet were involved in the treacherous coup attempt, they betray my ideals and should face justice,” Mr. Gulen said in a statement.

Mr. Tokgoz said such involvement would be “against his teachings for the last 50 years.” He cited Mr. Gulen’s proclamations on behalf of peace, social service and interfaith tolerance.

“It is impossible for us, his followers, to have committed this. It would negate us,” Mr. Tokgoz said.

The coup attempt, and the street battles that accompanied it, left more than 270 dead, according to The Associated Press. The government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has extended a state of emergency and targeted Mr. Gulen’s followers by arresting more than 30,000 people and having tens of thousands fired from government, police, educational and other jobs, the AP reported. The group Human Rights Watch says more than 2,000 judges and prosecutors alone have been purged and that journalists are also targeted.

Even some scholars who do suspect Mr. Gulen’s supporters within the military of the coup plot contend that Mr. Erdogan is now overreaching in his vast crackdown on anyone associated with the movement.

“This is insane, really,” one Turkish man in his 50s said last month during his stay in Pittsburgh. He said he’s not even a Gulen follower, but he lost his job at a government-related agency for the sole reason, he believes, that his son was attending a Gulen-affiliated school. He has since left Pittsburgh for a job opportunity in the Netherlands.

Mr. Erdogan — who has brought an Islamic-political blend into what has been Turkey’s century-long tradition of a secular state — and Mr. Gulen were once seen as allies. But a rift between them grew wider amid various developments, including government corruption investigations that Mr. Erdogan contends were politically motivated attacks on his allies by Gulen-affiliated prosecutors. Each accuses the other of using stealth means to amass power and subvert Turkish democracy.

Mr. Gulen has spoken and published often on interfaith cooperation and tolerance.

Critics contend that his movement placed its many followers in positions of influence throughout the Turkish government, military, police and educational establishments, with the long-term aim of greater control over the state.

Mr. Gulen’s followers have created organizations all over the world. The Turkish Cultural Center of Pittsburgh is operated by local Turkish Americans, as are similar cultural centers in other cities. Its members are mostly Hizmet sympathizers and promote events and public talks aimed at promoting greater intercultural understanding and awareness of Turkish heritage. Another Hizmet-inspired organization, the Peace Islands Institute, also has stated aims of promoting peacemaking and mutual respect and problem solving.

Also, a global network of schools linked to or inspired by Mr. Gulen include tax-funded charter schools in the United States, including Allegheny County and elsewhere in Pennsylvania. Some of the schools have been criticized in reports in past years by the Philadelphia Inquirer and CBS’s “60 Minutes” for practices related to finances, employment, education and immigration. Supporters say the schools bring strong science programs and other offerings to children whose families otherwise couldn’t afford such instruction.

Those involved with the Turkish Cultural Center said the center is not affiliated with such schools.

Mr. Tokgoz said local Turks feel obligated to help those who have fled for fear of imprisonment to start new lives here, either temporarily or permanently.

One 40-year-old man, who didn’t want to give his name for concern for his family in Turkey, said he has accepted his new circumstances.

“God makes every human being get accustomed to all situations no matter what,” said the man, who worked as a singer and teacher of religious songs to children, frequently on television.

He said his connection to Hizmet marked him for likely arrest by the government. When he got off the plane in the United States, he said sensed God telling him, “This is going to be a new life for you, so be prepared for what’s to come.”

He hopes to bring the rest of his family over and live “in America where people are respected and there is freedom.”

Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette , October 24, 2016


Related News

US prosecutor denies any links to Gülen, says never set foot in Turkey

Responding to allegations from Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who accused US Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara of being a sympathizer of the faith-based Gülen movement, Bharara said he has just learned Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen’s name from Google and has never been to Turkey.

1-year-old baby with cancer held in Mardin prison with mother: former HDP deputy

Avşin Usanmaz, a one-year-old baby with brain cancer, has been held in a prison in Mardin province with his imprisoned mother.

Astonishing questions about the failed coup attempt in Turkey

Critics claim that this failed coup attempt was simply a pretext to legitimize arbitrary authoritarian practices, eliminate all the dissent while filling the state apparatus with staunch supporters, and start an ethnic cleansing against sympathizers of the Gulen movement and Alawites.

Food and fun abound at Turkish Festival

Alamo Plaza was alive with music and food, Saturday, for the annual Turkish Festival. The free event celebrated different aspects of the Turkish culture including folk dance, the performing arts and authentic cuisine. This year’s theme was San Antonio Goes Turkish.

Purge-victim family drowns in the Aegean Sea off Turkey

A Turkish family of five has reportedly drowned after a boat capsized in the Aegean Sea, off the western coast of Turkey, according to several Turkish media outlets. The victims have reportedly been sought by the Turkish government over their links to the Gülen group.

500 Food Packages to 500 Families

Waiting for Helping hands.Helping hands relief foundation and Turkish Cultural Center are cooperatively working to help the needy in upstate New York. Helping Hands Relief foundation will distribute food packages to more than 500 families from Myanmar, and Somalia to provide temporary relief during 2013.Each food packet contains about 10 pounds of food, and is […]

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

Erdogan is transforming Turkey into a totalitarian prison

Scholars: Misconceptions of Islam still abound

IFLC’s ‘colors of the world’ takes stage in Brazil

NJ Legislature recognized Turkish-American organizations for accomplishments, contributions

Fethullah Gülen’s message of condemnation and condolences for victims of the terrorist attack in Gaziantep, Turkey:

Erdoğan admits calling Habertürk executive to change reporting during Gezi protests

Water Well Constructed in Uganda in Memory of Slain Journalist

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News