Parents dream of their children being admitted to Turkish schools in Senegal

The Senegalese students are holding flags in front of their school (Photo: Sunday's Zaman)
The Senegalese students are holding flags in front of their school (Photo: Sunday's Zaman)


Date posted: November 3, 2013

BİLAL ÖĞÜTCÜ, DAKAR

Senegal is a predominantly Muslim country (99 percent of its 15 million people are Muslim). 

This developing African nation, which has a long coastline along the Atlantic Ocean, was a French colony for many years; the official language in the country is still French. Senegal has a strong influence over all other African nations.

The Senegalese people have become familiar with Turks through Turkish schools in the country. Senegalese Media Owners Association Chair Madiambal Diagne says this has changed their perspective radically. He notes that they particularly appreciate the Turks’ contribution because they observe Islamic precepts and rules.

Noting that he finds the Turks courageous, Diagne says: “Sadly, our faith is not properly represented by some people in the world. However, the Hizmet movement is focused on tolerance, brotherhood, solidarity and ethical values.”

According to Diagne, the Turks should also be appreciated because of their approach toward education. “The best way to help people in another country like ours is to extend support in the field of education. The people who receive this educational support become industrious and decent and do their job properly. There is a visible gap between the higher income groups and lower income segments. To ensure that the middle class is enlarged in a country, people should have better education. To have more decent rulers, we need well-educated people. The Yavuz Selim Education Institutions that serve in Senegal offer this,” he says.

After being introduced to the Hizmet movement, Diagne comments on the movement and Fethullah Gülen every Monday in his paper. “People are surprised, and when they get surprised, they read more. The representatives of the Hizmet movement here are taken as role models. They represent Turkey very well via their attitudes and actions. I believe this will contribute to the emergence of new ties between Turkey and Senegal.”

‘Turkey is not a country you can understand without seeing it’

The Senegalese media boss notes that his surprise at Turkey increased after paying a visit to the country. “As Senegalese people, we thought we were very hospitable people. But I saw the true hospitability when I visited Turkey.”

Diagne believes that Turkey has been unable to introduce its assets and beauty properly “Turkey is not a country you can understand without seeing it. I realized that what I had been told was insignificant compared to what I have seen.”

‘Parents dream of their children being admitted to Turkish schools’

The Yavuz Selim Education Institution has nine schools in Senegal. The Senegalese media owner says the Turkish schools have gained prestige over a very short period of time: “The greatest dream of parents here is to see their kids study at one of these schools some day. These schools offer high quality education and serve as role models for the children. The other education institutions in Senegal should take lessons from these schools. Currently, Yavuz Selim Education Institutions have preschool institutions, elementary, primary and high schools. They need to open a university immediately as well.”

Turks go to remotest villages to deliver sacrificial meat

They should support the activities of Hizmet movement, says Diagne, which includes delivery of meat from sacrificed animals to the poor and needy during Eid al-Adha. Recalling that Turkish people not only from Turkey but also from Germany, France, Belgium, Holland, Sweden and Australia have visited their country to join these efforts this year, Diagne says: “They go to the remotest parts of the country. Some of these villages are so remote that even we do not go there. This is amazing. We need to extend support and help as much as we can.”

Source: Today's Zaman , November 3, 2013


Related News

Gulen Movement Educates Kurds, and not Everyone Is Happy

Nicolas Birch,  Turkey There is a studious silence in the basement floor of the Rose Pink Women’s Education and Mutual Aid Association in Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish southeast. In three classrooms, 70 12-year-old girls are hard at work studying for exams that will decide their secondary school future. Wearing headscarves that […]

Turkish Twitter war over education

Plans to abolish “prep schools” in Turkey have sparked a huge feud between two of the country’s most powerful forces on the micro-blogging website Twitter. Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his AK party have proposed eliminating the schools, which provide private tuition classes to help high school children prepare for university entrance exams. […]

Africa, Albania and Erdogan’s campaign against Turkish schools

The Turkish president, who has not ceased making unsubstantiated allegations against his perceived opponents, had during his official visit to Albania called for the closure of the Turkish schools in the country, claiming that the schools were established by a terrorist organization.

Turkish Schools Discussed at Johns Hopkins University

In a conference at the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute (CACI) at the Johns Hopkins University, Turkish schools in Central Asia were closely analyzed. In a conference titled ‘Turkish way of Islam Educates Central Asians’, which Dr. Bayram Balci from the French Institute of Anatolian Studies in Istanbul attended as lecturer, the educational movement initiated by Fethullah […]

Erdogan on a mission to seek allies more than trading partners

Erdogan wants the Gulen-linked schools in Africa to be closed down, although they are the very educational establishments which are popular with Africa’s middle class. They have sprung up all over Africa in recent years. They are an affordable alternative to French schools.

Ongoing political raids against schools and businesses are unconstitutional

Inspectors from the tax, finance, fire, social security, environment and urbanization, food, agriculture and husbandry bureaus were brought to the school with Smuggling and Organized Crime Police while the students were in session. Such raids have occurred repeatedly across the educational institutions’ branches, along with other schools, on an almost daily basis.

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

The Preventive Role of Culture in Women’s Empowerment: Possibilities and Challenges

What is wrong with the Western media?

Erdogan, Gulen Combat Islamophobia, Extremism

Human rights associations up in arms over deputy’s remarks on torture allegations

You cannot explain it!

Kimse Yok Mu reached out to 1 million people in Eid al-Adha

African firms signal increased trade at TUSKON meeting

Copyright 2025 Insightful Neighbor