It is unfair, unjust and politically motivated to incriminate the Gulen Movement

Dr. Shanthikumar Hettiarachchi
Dr. Shanthikumar Hettiarachchi


Date posted: August 13, 2016

Dr. Shanthikumar Hettiarachchi

It is with great shock and sadness I tuned into the news to learn about the recent development in Turkey, which now might be called the abortive coup, in the middle of already a vulnerable political landscape. However, Turkey remains one of the key geopolitical entities with its influence both in the East and the West in terms of International Relations and diplomatic partnership.

My contact with Turkey has been through the global network of the Hizmet Movement which unfortunately is incriminated in this abortive coup as being its architect. Erdogan administration swiftly accused Fethullah Gulen for master minding the coup, a sellable populist argument and an irresponsible way to scapegoat a messy politics of Ankara which his tenure created over the years. Gulen in response to the accusation, requested the international community to investigate if there was such an attempt on his part and the movement he helped evolve what today has become unequivocally influential in opinion making and forward thinking in the Islamic world.

The movement brings the world of Islam on to a middle ground of dialogue between cultures, an alternative to conflict of religious cultures, aggression and violence. He addresses that difference is part of being human and that authentic Islam de facto, embraces it as part of formation of human communities. He pioneers in Islamic theology with a social entrepreneurship applicable to modernity. Islam cannot be in opposition to modernity. Both Islam and modernity should be open to other worldviews, engage with each other, stand side by side to face more critical challenges of modernity and perhaps the deviant practices of Islam.

My association with the Hizmet movement as a non-Muslim South Asian student of both Islam and modernity has helped me to view each in their perspective. Like any other religious tradition Islam too has to deal with difference as it has done during its own prophet’s time. Medina constitution clearly elaborates that there is all possibility of coexistence between Muslims and non-Muslims. Hizmet movement accepts this unique premise that dialogue and partnership could help modern humans to cope with difference, as religious worlds could provide at least an important strand to meaning and purpose to life. It is my view that Gulen and the Movement has provided, especially the Turkish Diaspora, central Asia and of course the native Turks a grip of Islam palatable to face up to the modern challenges and give their best back to Islam as a view of life and a way of life.

It is proven beyond reasonable doubt that neither one philosophy, a specific science, an economic system, a political ideology nor for that matter a single religion is able to fully provide solutions to the problems and issues of our times. As a reader of Gulen’s thinking and a keen observer of the movement, I am convinced that they are aware of the viability of multiple approaches to resolve our global issues as well as the locally troubling scenarios. This to me is the reason why I began to study the Movement and wrote and worked sufficiently about its ability to relate to the ‘other’ who is different. So to accuse and incriminate a movement that is based on the Islamic notion of hizmet (service) of a coup to topple a civilian rule is unfair, unjust and politically motivated for all practical reasons.


Related News

What we learned from the operation

While the government works to finish off the Hizmet movement, it may even call for the expulsion of the US ambassador from the country. The real duty of Halkbank is to act as Iran’s opening door to the world, and the US blockade has been violated for years. We learned that the pro-government media is allergic to shoe boxes [money used in alleged bribery was found in shoe boxes in one of the suspects’ homes].

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.

EU stresses right to freedom of expression in wake of media investigations [in Turkey]

The European Union has underlined that public authorities should not interfere with freedom of expression in the media, against the background of Turkish government pressure on the media through criminal and civil lawsuits. “The right to freedom of expression includes the freedom to receive and impart information and ideas without the interference of public authorities,” Peter Stano, spokesperson for EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Füle, said to the Cihan news agency.

The Hizmet movement and external forces

Fethullah Gülen Hocaefendi and the Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV) make statements on behalf of the Hizmet movement. Even the GYV’s statements can hardly be considered as binding for every individual who is inspired by the Hizmet movement and who participates in different projects in a different manner as the Hizmet movement does not have a central organization or membership mechanism.

Turkish court: There is no Gulen terror organization

The 2nd Criminal Court in the southern province of Hatay rejected an indictment prepared about the Fethullah Gülen Terrorist Organization (FETÖ), a term used by the Turkish government to describe the Gülen movement, saying that there is no such a terrorist organization officially identified.

Turkey’s Opposition Fails a Critical Test: To Challenge Erdogan

The CHP’s inability to seize the moment and strongly condemn the arbitrary extent and nature of the purges from the start was a critical failure, and one that serves to undermine its integrity and sustainability as an opposition force. Despite tentative but welcome signs from the CHP towards highlighting the exponential injustices of Turkey’s ongoing purge, it still seems like a classic case of acting too little, too late.

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Turkey’s latest bombing will help its president amass more power

A perseverant Kurdish man at the Turkish school in Siberia

285 Turkish teachers and families risk forcible deportation and persecution in Pakistan

Education remains an alarming concern for scores of Syrian refugees

49-member team to report to President Erdoğan on Gülen-linked trials

Conflict between Gülen Movement and Turkey’s ruling AKP reflected in business world

Confluence of cultures at 14th edition of IFLC

Copyright 2025 Insightful Neighbor