Author: Aylin D. Miller

  • Iran’s nuclear negotiator meets with Turkey’s foreign minister

    Iran’s nuclear negotiator meets with Turkey’s foreign minister

    The Associated Press

    ANKARA, Turkey: Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator met Sunday with Turkey’s foreign minister, who reiterated his country’s position that the Islamic Republic has the right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.

    Saeed Jalili, on his way back to Tehran after attending talks with envoys from the U.S. and five other world powers in Geneva on Saturday, met with Foreign Minister Ali Babacan during a stopover in Istanbul.

    “We believe every sovereign country has the right to use nuclear energy for peaceful aims and to have that technology,” Babacan told a joint news conference with Jalili.

    Babacan, who said Turkey is against nuclear weapons, supports diplomacy to resolve the Iran nuclear issue.

    The six world powers — the five permanent U.N. Security Council members plus Germany — have called on Iran to freeze uranium enrichment, arguing that it is designed to make nuclear weapons.

    Iran has rejected the demand, as it has repeatedly done in the past. It says its uranium enrichment program is for peaceful purposes.

  • Afghan police: Kidnapped Turks released

    Afghan police: Kidnapped Turks released

    KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Police say two Turkish nationals kidnapped in western Afghanistan have been released along with their Afghan driver.

    Raouf Ahmadi, police spokesman for the western zone of Afghanistan, says the release happened Sunday in Herat province.

    Ahmadi confirmed a ransom was paid but said police are trying to get details about it.

    Turkish state media said the Turks were engineers and were expected to return to Turkey on Monday.

    Authorities said the two worked for a road construction company. They had disappeared for a week.

    There have been a number of kidnappings in Herat recently, mainly targeting Afghans. Most cases are of a criminal nature and not linked to the Taliban insurgency.

    Associated Press

  • FLORIDA UNFLORIDA UNIVERSITESI OGRENCILERI WEB SITESINDE YUSUF HALACOGLU

    FLORIDA UNFLORIDA UNIVERSITESI OGRENCILERI WEB SITESINDE YUSUF HALACOGLU

    Bu Güzel Sohbeti Dinlemek İçin

    FLORIDA TURK RADYOSU bugun onemli bir ismi Türk Tarih Kurumu Başkanı VE Turkish Forum danisma kurulu Uyesi Prof.Dr.Yusuf Halaçoğlunu agirladi.

    Bu programla Amerikadaki sessiz yaz sezonu aniden canlandi..!

    Sayin Halacoglu ile birebir konuşmadan önce okadar çok telefonlar ve mesajlar aldımki işin doğrusu program öncesi biraz tedirgindim, bu programi Doğukan Manço ile birlikte sunmaya karar verdik ve karşımıza okadar mütevazı o kadar hoş bir insan çıktı’kı, benim tarihten bu yana büyük hayranlık duyduğum bazı isimler vardır bu isimlere bugün bir isim daha eklendi “Yusuf Halaçoğlu”

    Program ilerledikçe sayın Halaçoğlu’nun rahmetli Barış Manço ile yakın görüştükleri ortaya çıktı ayni zamanda Turk tarihini incelemek uzere 63 ayri ulkede film cekimleri yapmayai planladiklarini fakat Baris Manco’nun vefati ile bu projenin rafa kaldirildigini ogrendik, Doğukan Manço Yusuf Halaçoğlu’nu, çocukluk yıllarından hatırladı ve cok guzel bir ani paylasimi yaşandı.

    Sayın Halaçoğlu beklediğimizin dışında o kadar hoşgörü sahibiymiş ki sonradan farkettik kendisine biraz da çekinerek bir soru sorduk, “size sivri dilli diyenler var, öyle misiniz?” sorumuza..! bulundugum mevki tamamen dogrulari soylememi gerektiren bir mevki, buda bazen bu soylentilere sebep olabiliyor, diye cevap verdi. Sözde Ermeni Sorunu’ ile ilgili konuşmasından sonra ise espriyle karışık “fazla mı ciddi oldum yine yoksa” şeklinde nükte yapmaktan da kendini alamadı.

    Pogram sirasinda Ermeni olaylarinin kabul edilmesi durumunda nelerle karsilasabiliriz sorusuna “bu soruyu akliniza bile getirmeyin boyle birsey asla soz konusu degil” diye cevap vermesi cok guzledi.

    Sevgili okurlar, Türkiye’de, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’ün aslında tam da bu karanlık günlerde bize ışık tutması için kurduğu en önemli kurumun TTK’nın başında en güvenilir bilim adamlarından birisi bulunuyor. Prof. Dr. YUSUF HALACOGLU, bunu düşününce bile içimiz rahatlıyor

    Bu degerli konugumuzdan sonra bu hafta 20 Temmuz pazar gunu aksam 7 de FLORIDA TURK RADYOSU’nda yine cok onemli bir konuk agirlanacak bu onemli konugumuz Turk Dil Kurumu Baskani Prof.Dr.SUKRU HALUK AKALIN

    Pazar gunu bu guzel programla FlORIDA TURK RADYOSU’nda hepbirlikte olmak dilegi ile…….

    www.floridaturkradyosu.com

    Sevi
    sevisari@yahoo.com

  • Turkish déjà vu

    Turkish déjà vu

    Friday, July 18, 2008

    If Washington were to pursue a military solution in its efforts to halt the Iranian nuclear program, Turkey – the only NATO country bordering Iran – must be a part of its planning. Likewise, if the United States and its European allies were to implement tighter economic sanctions against Iran, Ankara would have to play a key role because much of Iran’s trade with Europe goes through Turkey.

    On the surface, Turkey seems to be on board with the West regarding Iran. But the Turkish position on Iran today looks much like the Turkish position regarding the buildup to the Iraq war in 2003. The specific factors that led to Ankara’s decision to oppose the war are re-emerging, building opposition to American plans to deal with Iran’s nuclear program, either through sanctions or military measures.

    In 2003, the Turkish public had little awareness about the approaching Iraq war. At that time, the United States was using Turkey’s Incirlik air base to bomb Saddam Hussein’s air defenses. At the same time, Ankara was paralyzed by its internal struggle to preserve secularism within the government. If you read Turkish papers published back then, you would not guess that the United States was about to occupy one of Turkey’s neighbors and forever change their neighborhood.

    Five years later – déjà vu. Turkey is once again stricken with political paralysis over the battle between secularists and the governing Justice and Development Party, or AKP. As a result, there is almost no coverage in the Turkish media on foreign policy issues, including Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Domestic tensions make it impossible for that issue to penetrate the debate. Perhaps Turks won’t even notice until Iran actually detonates a bomb.

    Another similarity between today and the events of 2003 is that the AKP government is playing both sides to get away with doing nothing. As it negotiated with U.S. diplomats in 2003 about a joint front against Saddam, the AKP voiced antiwar rhetoric at home. Moreover, days before the war began, the AKP’s trade minister went to Baghdad to sign a multibillion-dollar trade deal with Saddam. In the end, the AKP-dominated Turkish Parliament voted to keep Turkey out of the war.

    Now, once again, the AKP is playing both sides to shirk responsibility. While opposing U.S. military action, the party continues to spout its official line: “Turkey wants a nuclear-free Middle East.” Albeit a good start, this policy implies that Israel’s nukes are as much a problem as Iran’s would be – a stance that absolves Ankara from any real political obligations toward Europe and the United States on Iran. Moreover, at a time when the West is imposing sanctions, the AKP has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $3.5 billion in Iran’s South Pars gas field – a move eerily similar to 2003.

    Another similarity is America’s failure to communicate with the Turks. In 2003, Turkish officials expected, in vain, that Secretary of State Colin Powell would come to Ankara to promise that the war against Saddam would not break up Iraq and create an independent Kurdish state.

    Today, seasoned diplomats in the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs cannot tell from one day to the next how America is planning on dealing with Iran. And like in 2003, Ankara is waiting with crossed fingers for a high-level American statesman to explain Washington’s plans.

    There is, however, one difference between 2003 and 2008: the role of the Turkish military. In the run-up to the Iraq war, bickering between the Turkish government and the military complicated matters for the United States. Neither the AKP nor the military wanted to be responsible for making the decision for their country to go to war. This thinking proved to be a fatal mistake for the military, rendering it irrelevant in Washington and powerless in Turkey.

    After dropping out of the foreign policy debate in 2003, the military lost popularity, as was seen in the July, 2007 elections. Today it is in disarray.

    This leaves the AKP in charge of major decisions regarding Iran. The AKP opposes both a military solution to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, as well as non-military measures like strong economic sanctions. As a result of the AKP’s rapprochement with Tehran since 2003, the official line in Ankara is that “Turkey’s economic interests in Iran are too important to sacrifice.”

    The latest American overture to Ankara, supporting Turkish efforts against the Kurdistan Workers Party, has not sufficed to change the government’s attitude. While Washington has allowed Turkey to target PKK terrorist camps in northern Iraq, Tehran, as a favor to Turkey, has upped the ante with Washington by actually bombing such camps.

    If the United States was betting on Turkish cooperation against Iran, it might as well plan to navigate around the looming iceberg. It might already be too little too late for Washington to count on Turkey on Iran.

    Soner Cagaptay, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, is the author of “Islam, Secularism and Nationalism in Modern Turkey: Who is a Turk?”

  • FETULLAH GULEN ; Court orders US to reverse immigration decision for prominent Turkish religious leader

    FETULLAH GULEN ; Court orders US to reverse immigration decision for prominent Turkish religious leader

    Court orders US to reverse immigration decision for prominent Turkish religious leader


    The Associated Press

    Friday, July 18, 2008

    WASHINGTON: A U.S. court has ruled that the Bush administration improperly rejected a prominent Turkish religious leader’s application toward permanent residence in the United States and ordered the government to reverse the decision.
    Fethullah Gulen, a Sufi scholar and educator with millions of followers across Turkey and parts of Central Asia, has been living in the United States since 1999. U.S. immigration authorities rejected his application to be classified as “an alien of extraordinary ability,” a step that would have facilitated his permanent residence.
    A federal court ruled Wednesday that the decision was improper, according to court documents obtained by The Associated Press that have not yet been made public. Immigration officials had argued that Gulen did not meet the qualification of extraordinary ability in his field “demonstrated by sustained national or international acclaim and whose achievements have been recognized in the field through extensive documentation.”
    Gulen is one of Turkey’s most influential intellectuals, a scholar and preacher of Sufism, a mystical form of Islam. His followers run schools in dozens of countries. In Turkey, they administer hundreds of schools, as well as six universities and a various media organizations. His media network reaches millions daily.
    Gulen is revered by many but viewed with suspicion by somein the 99 percent Muslim country where secularism is enshrined in the constitution and religion has traditionally been firmly excluded from politics.
    In 2006, a Turkish court acquitted him of trying to overturn Turkey’s secular regime. Prosecutors had accused him of trying to create an Islamic groundswell and of “brainwashing” school children.
    Gulen’s lawyer, H. Ronald Klasko, said he did not understand the U.S. government’s argument that he did not meet the requirements.
    “For whatever reason, the government has decided to fight his application,” he said. “Their arguments were very strange to me.”
    The U.S. court’s decision means that Gulen can now apply for permanent residence under a more favorable category. The judge scheduled another hearing for next month and could order the government to decide on Gulen’s residency application. The government could also appeal Wednesday’s ruling.
    U.S. officials declined to comment on the decision Thursday.
    “We have just received the judgment and have forwarded it to the appropriate Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security officials for their review,” said Patty Hartman, a spokeswoman for federal prosecutors in Philadelphia, where the case was heard.

     

    =============

     

    From: ergun@cox.net [mailto:ergun@cox.net]

    Subject: American court records show one thing clearly: Fethullah Gulen is a fraud!

     

    Please read and weep! 

     

    These are unbiased records of an American court!

     

    This relates to Gulen’s visa application which was first denied and then overturned  on appeal.  What is interesting is how Gulen’s  empire was dissected (see below) by THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA based on evidence submitted by Gulen to the court in support of his application and which evidence was shown by the court to be a fraud and sham.  He is nothing but a charismatic leader fawned over and supported by wealthy donors in an never ending cycle of empty Gulen worship and promotion.  He has “Armenianized” his accomplishments!  This proper court analysis of Gulen’s empire shows Gulen’s true colors – a fraud! 

     

    Here are telling comment from the court:

     

    “The record further shows that much of the “acclaim” that plaintiff claims to have achieved has been sponsored and financed by plaintiff’s own movement.” 

     

    “A number of the letters submitted in support of plaintiff’s petition reference schools established or founded by plaintiff.  These references appear to be mistaken; there is no evidence that plaintiff played any direct role in establishing any schools.”

     

    “The evidence submitted by plaintiff, when carefully examined, reveals that he is not a scholar and his work is not the subject of serious scholarship. He is a religious and political figure attempting to buy academic prestige by paying people to write papers about him.”

     

    “Plaintiff goes on to state that w[a]cademics at major universities focus on his work in religious tolerance and education and have made Mr. Gulen’s work the subject of entire courses.” PI. Mem., at 56. This statement is completely unsupported by any evidence. Plaintiff can point to no entire courses devoted to his work; nor has he identified any “major universities” where his work is the subject of entire courses.”

     

    “…but it should be noted that his statement, at page 47 of his memorandum, that his receipt of the UNESCO award “was another occasion in which Mr. Gulen met with his Holiness Pope John Paul II,” is patently untrue. The award was given in October 2005. Pope John Paul II died April 2, 2005.”

     

     “Plaintiff has never performed scholarly research in the field of education. He has never advised other academics in the field of education. And consulting on conferences about his own work is essentially continuing to promote himself and his movement by paying academics to write papers about him.”

     

    These comments are not by Gulen’s opponents or critics but by a disinterested party – the US District Court!

     

    Ergun Kirlikovali

     

     

     

     

     

     

    This is the html version of the file .

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    These search terms have been highlighted:  us  district  court  eastern  pennsylvania  fethullah  gulen 

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    ——————————————————————————–

     

    IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

     

    FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

     

    FETULLAH GULEN, :

     

    Plaintiff

     

    No. 07-CV-2148

     

    V. !

     

    Judge Dalzell

     

    MICHAEL CHERTOFF, et al.,

     

    Defendants

     

    DEFENDANTS’ RESPONSE IN OPPOSITION

     

    TO PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

     

    Plaintiff Fetullah Gulen asks this Court to find that

     

    the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services’

     

    final action on his application for a preference visa as an

     

    alien of extraordinary ability in the field of education was

     

    arbitrary and capricious and not supported by substantial

     

    evidence. Because the evidence of record, all supplied by

     

    plaintiff, makes it very clear that plaintiff does not meet

     

    the statutory requirements, his motion for summary judgment

     

    should be denied.

     

    Argument

     

    As explained in Defendants’ Memorandum in Support of

     

    Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Deft. Mem.), summary

     

    judgment is appropriate where the moving party, through

     

    affidavits, depositions, admissions, and answers to

     

    interrogatories, demonstrates that there is no genuine issue

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 1 of 26

     

    as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to

     

    judgment as a matter of law. Jalil v. Advel Corp., 873 F.2d

     

    701, 706 (3d Cir. 1989); Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). Because

     

    this case arises under the Administrative Procedures Act,

     

    plaintiff must show that there is no issue of material fact

     

    and that the agency action was arbitrary, capricious, an

     

    abuse of discretion, contrary to law, or unsupported by

     

    substantial evidence. 5 U.S.C. § 706; Camphill Soltane v.

     

    U.S. Department of Justice, 381 F.3d 143, 148 {3d Cir.

     

    2004). Substantial evidence in this context is “more than a

     

    mere scintilla” but “something less than the weight of the

     

    evidence, and the possibility of drawing two inconsistent

     

    conclusions from the evidence does not prevent an

     

    administrative agency’s findings from being supported by

     

    substantial evidence.” Port Norris Express Co.. Inc. v.

     

    Interstate Commerce Commission, et al., 697 F.2d 497, 502

     

    (3d Cir. 1982). The nonmoving party (here, the government)

     

    can defeat summary judgment by identifying substantial

     

    evidence of record which supports the agency’s decision.

     

    As set forth in Defendants’ Memorandum, the term

     

    “extraordinary ability” means a level of expertise

     

    indicating that the individual is one of the small

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 2 of 26

     

    percentage who have risen to the very top of the field of

     

    endeavor. 8 C.F.R. § 204.5(h)(2); Yasar v. DHS. 2006 WL

     

    778623, *1 (S.D.Tex.) (“This type of visa … is the most

     

    preferential classification available for immigrants who are

     

    considered ‘priority workers,’ and so it is reserved for

     

    aliens whose credentials and accomplishments place them at

     

    the very top of their field.”) To establish that he is an

     

    alien of extraordinary ability in one of the designated

     

    fields, a petitioner must show that he has achieved

     

    sustained national or international acclaim at the very top

     

    level. 8 C.F.R. § 204.5(h)(3). To prevail on his motion

     

    for summary judgment, then, plaintiff must show that the

     

    undisputed facts of record establish that he has achieved a

     

    level of expertise in the field of education which places

     

    him at the very top of the field of education, and that the

     

    agency’s decision to the contrary was arbitrary, capricious,

     

    unsupported by substantial evidence, or contrary to law.

     

    In this case, the record contains facts which suggest

     

    that plaintiff has made contributions to the field of

     

    education by advocating the establishment of schools in

     

    Turkey and elsewhere, and the agency has acknowledged that.

     

    See A.R. 00010-00011 (AAO decision). However, the record

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 3 of 26

     

    also contains overwhelming evidence that plaintiff is not an

     

    expert in the field of education, is not an educator, and is

     

    certainly not one of a small percentage of experts in the

     

    field of education who have risen to the very top of that

     

    field. Further, the record contains overwhelming evidence

     

    that plaintiff is primarily the leader of a large and

     

    influential religious and political movement with immense

     

    commercial holdings. The record further shows that much of

     

    the “acclaim” that plaintiff claims to have achieved has

     

    been sponsored and financed by plaintiff’s own movement. It

     

    is the government’s position that the evidence of record

     

    permits only one conclusion: that plaintiff has failed to

     

    meet the requirements of an alien of extraordinary ability

     

    in the field of education.

     

    In his Memorandum of Law in Support of Plaintiff’s

     

    Motion for Summary Judgment (Pi. Mem.), plaintiff has

     

    attempted to reframe the issue for this Court as whether

     

    plaintiff is involved in education, and whether he has

     

    achieved sustained international acclaim. The difficulty

     

    for plaintiff is that the statute requires that he show that

     

    he has achieved sustained national or international acclaim

     

    in the field of education and that he has attained a level

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 4 of 26

     

    of expertise that places him at the very top of the field of

     

    education. His attainment of international acclaim in the

     

    field of religious tolerance and interfaith dialogue is

     

    irrelevant. Similarly, whether religious scholars recognize

     

    him as a leader in the field of religious tolerance and

     

    interfaith dialogue is irrelevant. Religious tolerance and

     

    interfaith dialogue are not fields for which Congress has

     

    granted visa preferences.

     

    Two analogies illustrate the difference. The

     

    industrialist Andrew Carnegie gave millions of dollars to

     

    establish libraries and colleges all over the United States.

     

    This would not make Andrew Carnegie a person of

     

    extraordinary ability in the field of education if he were

     

    alive today; he would still be an industrialist. Scholars

     

    all over the world study the work of Albert Einstein and

     

    recognize him as a leader in the field of physics. If he

     

    were alive today he would certainly be a person of

     

    extraordinary ability in the field of science, but he would

     

    not be a person of extraordinary ability in the field of

     

    education. Plaintiff is a leader in the fields of religious

     

    tolerance and interfaith dialogue; the fact that he supports

     

    education and his work is studied by educators does not

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 5 of 26

     

    convert him into a leader in the field of education.

     

    At page 39 of his Memorandum, plaintiff argues that

     

    because most universities “show subject matter disciplines

     

    organized as departments, such as … theology …. the

     

    field of education is broad and encompasses many fields of

     

    studies, including theology.” This argument makes the

     

    statutory limitation of aliens of extraordinary ability to

     

    the fields of science, arts, education, business and

     

    athletics meaningless. If every discipline taught in

     

    universities were encompassed in the field of education,

     

    there would be no reason for Congress to have singled out

     

    science, arts, business and athletics, since most

     

    universities have departments in all those fields. It could

     

    have simply provided visa preferences for aliens of

     

    extraordinary ability in education. It did not do so,

     

    however; it set forth specific fields to which the visa

     

    preference applies. The fact that theology is a legitimate

     

    field of study at the university level does not make

     

    theologians into experts in the field of education.

     

    In his Memorandum, plaintiff sets up various straw

     

    arguments and shoots them down. First, he states that

     

    “Defendants’ arbitrary decision that Plaintiff can have only

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 6 of 26

     

    one occupation, either clergy or education, is contrary to

     

    established binding precedent.” PI. Mem., at 37. Defendants

     

    made no such decision. Defendants found first that

     

    plaintiff applied for the visa preference as a clergyman.

     

    A.R. 00002; see also A.R. 00243-245 (plaintiff’s 1-140

     

    petition, which identifies plaintiff as a clergyman and

     

    makes no mention of education). Defendants did not

     

    foreclose the possibility that religious leaders could be

     

    persons of extraordinary ability in the field of education:

     

    We do not contest that certain religious figures,

     

    such as the Pope, have previously engaged in

     

    educational activities or, as noted by Professor

     

    Esposito, that religious organizations have

     

    operated institutions of learning. These examples

     

    of religious leaders or institutions promoting or

     

    providing education do not establish that

     

    religious occupations fall within the field of

     

    education.

     

    A.R. at 00005. The AAO concluded that plaintiff had not

     

    established that his field of expertise fell within the

     

    sciences, arts, education, business or athletics. The AAO

     

    did not conclude that no religious figure could so qualify.

     

    Similarly, plaintiff asserts that defendants

     

    “arbitrarily concluded that Plaintiff can have only one

     

    occupation or area of expertise.” PI. Mem., at 38. This is

     

    not an accurate characterization of the AAO’s decision.

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 7 of 26

     

    Defendants examined the evidence submitted by plaintiff in

     

    depth, including both evidence of his religious activities

     

    and evidence of his role in educational activities, and

     

    concluded that he had not established that he is an alien of

     

    extraordinary ability in the field of education or that he

     

    intends to continue working in the field of education.

     

    A.R. 00014.

     

    Plaintiff asserts that he has produced substantial

     

    evidence of his alleged expertise in the field of education,

     

    but he points to very little actual evidence. He states

     

    that he has expertise in the field of education “because he

     

    has developed methods of teaching that incorporate religious

     

    tolerance into educational institutions” (PI. Mem., at 40),

     

    but he nowhere identifies those methods. He claims he

     

    “focuses on teaching religious tolerance to children at a

     

    young age as part of their education” (id.), but he presents

     

    no evidence to support this claim. None of his writings set

     

    forth curricula or teaching methodology; none of his

     

    writings are addressed to children; he has presented no

     

    evidence that he himself teaches children, or teaches people

     

    who teach children. He claims his work is used by “hundreds

     

    of schools based on Plaintiff’s methodologies” (.id.), but he

     

    8

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 8 of 26

     

    nowhere identifies or describes those methodologies.1

     

    Plaintiff argues that “entire conferences have been

     

    held focusing on his scholarly work, including his work in

     

    the field of education.” Pi. Mem., at 43. As an example,

     

    he cites a conference which he claims “was organized by the

     

    British government (House of Lords),” among others. See PI

     

    Mem., at 43, 51, 62. The evidence does not support this

     

    assertion. The Proceedings of that conference were

     

    submitted by plaintiff in support of his application, and

     

    copies of relevant portions are attached hereto as Exhibit

     

    A. The House of Lords is listed under the somewhat

     

    misleading heading “Organisers & Venues,” and the materials

     

    indicate that one of the sessions was held at the House of

     

    Lords, but there is nothing whatsoever to suggest that

     

    either the British government or the House of Lords in any

     

    way endorsed, sponsored or organized this conference.

     

    Ex. A, at 00001-00002.2

     

    1 “Methodology” is defined as “[t]he system of

     

    principles, procedures, and practices applied to a

     

    particular branch of knowledge,” or “[t]he branch of logic

     

    dealing with the general principles of the formation of

     

    knowledge.” Webster’s II New Riverside University

     

    Dictionary. Houghton Mifflin Co. 1988, at 747.

     

    2 The conference web site, www.qulenconference.ora.uk

     

    (accessed June 12, 2008), lists Parliament under the heading

     

    “Venues,” but lists no governmental entity under the heading

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 9 of 26

     

    An examination of the Proceedings reveals that none of

     

    the presenters is an expert in the field of education. Ex.

     

    A, at 00003-00051. Most of the presenters are students or

     

    professors of religion or political science; several of them

     

    are associated with the Gulen movement.3

     

    The papers presented at the conference reveal that the

     

    Gulen movement is primarily religious and political, not

     

    educational. For example, Mustafa Akyol, in his paper “What

     

    Made the Gulen Movement Possible,” states:

     

    The line of reasoning that Gulen articulates – the

     

    argument for an Islam which demands a liberal

     

    democratic, not Islamic, state – also explains the

     

    remarkable alliance in today’s Turkey between

     

    Muslim conservatives, and especially the Gulen

     

    movement, and the secular liberals. Their

     

    coalition is in favour of the EU bid and

     

    democratization, whereas the nationalist front –

     

    which includes die-hard secular Kemalists, ultraright

     

    wing Turkish nationalists, and hardliner

     

    Islamists – abhors both of those objectives. It

     

    is no accident the daily Zaman and its English

     

    language sister publication, Today’s Zaman – which

     

    both belong to the Gulen movement – hosts [sic]

     

    many liberal columnists.

     

    “Organisers.”

     

    3 For example, Y. Alp Aslandogan is editor of The

     

    Fountain magazine and vice-president of the Institute of

     

    Interfaith Dialog, both Gulen movement associated

     

    organizations. Ex. A at 00022, 00050. Muharamed Cetin is

     

    president of the movement’s Institute of Interfaith Dialog

     

    and co-founder and former editor of The Fountain. Ex. A at

     

    00026. Dogan Koc is co-founder and secretary of the

     

    Institute of Interfaith Dialog. Ex. A at 00040.

     

    10

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 10 of 26

     

    Ex. A at 00053.

     

    In his paper “The Fethullah Gulen Movement as a

     

    Transnational Phenomenon,” Bill Park describes the

     

    movement’s use of education as a way to “Islamize” society:

     

    Gulen propagates a kind of ‘educational Islamism’

     

    as opposed to a ‘political Islamism’ ….

     

    Through the internalized spiritual transformation

     

    of individuals will come a wider social

     

    transformation and, at least in Islamic societies

     

    (including Turkey) in which Gulen institutions

     

    operate, a (re-) ‘Islamisation’ of modernity.

     

    Thus, politics in Turkey and perhaps in other

     

    Islamic societies in which the movement operates

     

    should be ‘Islamized’ only via a bottom-up process

     

    and indirectly, in which people and state are

     

    reunited in a kind of organic way, through a

     

    shared attachment to and internalization of faith.

     

    In this sense, the Gulen movement’s mission in the

     

    Islamic societies in which it operates can be said

     

    to be a political project, but one that aspires to

     

    achieve its goals indirectly.

     

    Ex. A at 00055 (citation omitted).

     

    The Conference Proceedings also reveal that the Gulen

     

    movement involves a great deal more than inspiring followers

     

    to establish schools. In “Funding Gulen-Inspired Good

     

    Works: Demonstrating and Generating Commitment to the

     

    Movement,” Helen Rose Ebaugh and Dogan Koc state:

     

    The projects sponsored by Gulen-inspired followers

     

    today number in the thousands, span international

     

    borders and are costly in terms of human and

     

    financial capital. These initiatives include over

     

    2000 schools and seven universities in more than

     

    ninety countries in five continents, two modern

     

    11

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 11 of 26

     

    hospitals, the Zaman newspaper (now in both a

     

    Turkish and English edition), a television channel

     

    (Samanyolu), a radio channel (Burc FM), CHA (a

     

    major Turkish news agency), Aksiyon (a leading

     

    weekly news magazine), national and international

     

    Gulen conferences, Ramadan interfaith dinners,

     

    interfaith dialog trips to Turkey from countries

     

    around the globe and the many programs sponsored

     

    by the Journalists and Writers Foundation. In

     

    addition, the Isik insurance company and Bank

     

    Asya, an Islamic bank, are affiliated with the

     

    Gulen community.

     

    Ex. A at 00057 (citations omitted).

     

    There are several interesting aspects to the abovequoted

     

    passage. First, it is important to note that the

     

    authors refer to schools “sponsored by Gulen-inspired

     

    followers,” not established or sponsored by plaintiff.4 Of

     

    equal importance, the passage refers to the movement’s

     

    sponsorship of “national and international Gulen

     

    conferences.” This evidence is consistent with the contents

     

    of the radio interview quoted at length in defendants’

     

    memorandum in support of their motion for summary judgment,

     

    and suggests that the academic conferences plaintiff relies

     

    on to support his claim that he is recognized as a scholar

     

    4 A number of the letters submitted in support of

     

    plaintiff’s petition reference schools established or

     

    founded by plaintiff. See A.R. 00031-00037, 01082-01165.

     

    These references appear to be mistaken; there is no evidence

     

    that plaintiff played any direct role in establishing any

     

    schools.

     

    12

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 12 of 26

     

    are in fact organized and paid for by the Gulen movement,

     

    rather than by independent academics. The above passage

     

    also describes various financial and insurance companies and

     

    media outlets as inspired by or affiliated with the Gulen

     

    movement.5

     

    The Ebaugh-Koc paper also purports to explore the

     

    sources of funding for the Gulen movement’s projects, but in

     

    fact it merely presents a series of unattributed anecdotes.

     

    The authors explain the need for examining the issue of

     

    finances:

     

    Questions regarding the financing of these

     

    numerous and expensive projects are periodically

     

    raised by both critics of the Gulen Movement and

     

    newcomers to the movement who are invited to Gulen

     

    related events. Because of the large amounts of

     

    money involved in these projects, on occasion

     

    people have raised the possibility of a collusion

     

    between the movement and various governments,

     

    especially Saudi Arabia and/or Iran, and including

     

    the Turkish government. There have even been

     

    suspicions that the American CIA may be a

     

    financial partner behind the projects.

     

    Ex. A 00057 (citation omitted). Despite this explanation of

     

    their purpose, the authors made no systematic study of the

     

    5 The assertion that the Gulen movement has sponsored

     

    or inspired over 2000 schools and seven universities is not

     

    supported by any facts of record and does not appear

     

    consistent with plaintiff’s claim that his followers have

     

    established more than 600 educational institutions.

     

    PI.Mem., at 36.

     

    13

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 13 of 26

     

    sources, or even amounts, of Gulen movement funding.

     

    The authors claim to have interviewed twelve

     

    businessmen in Ankara who contribute “from 10%-70% of their

     

    annual income, ranging from $20,000-$300,000 per year.” Ex.

     

    A at 00062. Another “very successful businessman in

     

    Istanbul” contributes “20% of his 4-5 million dollar yearly

     

    income to movement-related projects.” Id. Finally, the

     

    authors assert that many “graduate students, many of them on

     

    small stipends from Turkey or from their American

     

    universities, pledge $2,000-$5,000 every year even though

     

    such pledges means [sic] great sacrifice on the students’

     

    part.” Ex. A at 00064. The authors provide no source for

     

    these alleged facts, other than their claim to have asked

     

    twelve unidentified businessmen how much they contributed.

     

    This is not scholarship; it is not even respectable

     

    journalism. The evidence submitted by plaintiff, when

     

    carefully examined, reveals that he is not a scholar and his

     

    work is not the subject of serious scholarship. He is a

     

    religious and political figure attempting to buy academic

     

    prestige by paying people to write papers about him.6

     

    6 The American Political Science Association web site

     

    lists dozens of upcoming conferences, including one focused

     

    on plaintiff scheduled for November 2008. That is the only

     

    14

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 14 of 26

     

    Plaintiff emphasizes the many highly complimentary

     

    letters of support he submitted to the agency. It is

     

    noteworthy, however, that only one of these letters is from

     

    an expert in the field of education.7 See A.R. 00182

     

    (letter from Dr. Sheryl L. Santos, Dean and Professor,

     

    College of Education, Texas Tech University). Dr. Santos

     

    says nothing about plaintiff’s educational methods or

     

    contributions. She describes plaintiff as “a friend, a

     

    peacemaker, an educated promoter of interfaith,

     

    intercultural dialogue whose presence and message is [sic]

     

    sorely needed in the world today.” Id. None of the other

     

    twenty-eight supporting letters is from a person with any

     

    connection to the field of education.

     

    Plaintiff claims he has received several awards as

     

    evidence of national and international acclaim in the field

     

    of education. However, he presents no evidence that any of

     

    conference listed that offers honoraria, plus travel and

     

    accommodations grants, for presenters. See

     

    www.apsanet.org/section_181.cfm (accessed June 16, 2008).

     

    See also www.gulenconference.us (accessed June 18, 2008),

     

    which describes the same conference but does not claim any

     

    connection to the APSA.

     

    7 As plaintiff points out, the field of education is a

     

    discipline which is concerned with methods of teaching and

     

    learning in schools. Pi. Mem., at 39. Put another way, it

     

    is w[t]he field of study concerned with teaching and

     

    learning pedagogy.” Webster’s II. at 418.

     

    15

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 15 of 26

     

    these awards recognize his accomplishments in the field of

     

    education. See A.R. 00041 (“Contribution to Tolerance and

     

    Dialogue”) .8 Further, it is not even clear that they were

     

    all awards. The only evidence that plaintiff was an

     

    “Honoree of the Peaceful Heroes Symposium” is a newsletter

     

    stating that on April 16, 2005, the Student Association for

     

    Islamic Dialogue at UTSA (presumably University of Texas at

     

    San Antonio) presented a program about peaceful heroes at

     

    which professors discussed “the Dalai Lama, Mohandas Gandhi,

     

    Mother Teresa, Fethullah Gulen and M.L. King.” A.R. 01043.

     

    The only evidence supporting plaintiff’s claim to be an

     

    “Honoree of the Peace Heroes Award” by religious leaders in

     

    Leeds, United Kingdom, is an advertisement for a forum

     

    called “Heroes for Peace” containing the following

     

    description: “Many people see religions as being the cause

     

    of troubles and wars. This event aims to show how people

     

    from all faiths work for peace – heroes such as Dadi Janki,

     

    the Dalai Lama, Martin Luther King, King Ashok, Yitzhak

     

    Rabin, Fethulla Gulen, Starhawk and Guru Nank.” A.R. 01047.

     

    The only evidence to support plaintiff’s claim that he

     

    8 The translations of news articles about this award

     

    mention education, but the award itself does not. See A.R.

     

    at 00041, 00045, 00047.

     

    16

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 16 of 26

     

    received the Intersociety Adaptation and Contribution to

     

    Peace Award from the Kyrgzstan Spirituality Foundation is a

     

    reference in an article in The Muslim World which is sourced

     

    to an article in Zaman Daily, the Turkish newspaper

     

    affiliated with the Gulen movement. A.R. 01049-01051. The

     

    AAO properly found that plaintiff had not produced evidence

     

    to support his claim either that he was the recipient of a

     

    major, internationally recognized award in the field of

     

    education, or that he was the recipient of lesser nationally

     

    or internationally recognized awards in the field of

     

    education.9

     

    Plaintiff claims that the 40 books he has authored are

     

    scholarly publications meeting the criterion set forth in 8

     

    C.F.R. § 204.5(h)(3)(vi). Pi. Mem., at 49. He claims that

     

    these works focus on religious tolerance and education and

     

    are considered “scholarly work” by others in the field. Pi.

     

    Mem., at 50. This assertion is not supported by evidence of

     

    9 It is not clear whether plaintiff is relying on his

     

    supposed meetings with Pope John Paul II as evidence of his

     

    expertise in the field of education, but it should be noted

     

    that his statement, at page 47 of his memorandum, that his

     

    receipt of the UNESCO award “was another occasion in which

     

    Mr. Gulen met with his Holiness Pope John Paul II,” is

     

    patently untrue. The award was given in October 2005. A.R.

     

    00041, 00162. Pope John Paul II died April 2, 2005.

     

    17

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 17 of 26

     

    record.

     

    First, it should be noted that all of the books

     

    authored by plaintiff which were submitted to the agency in

     

    English were published not by university presses or

     

    scholarly publishing houses, but by plaintiff’s own

     

    publishing company, The Light Publishing Co., Inc.10 See

     

    Exhibit B hereto (title pages and reverses of books

     

    submitted by plaintiff). Some of the books list both The

     

    Light and The Gulen Institute, and include the Gulen

     

    Institute’s web site, www.en.faulen.com.

     

    Second, none of these books are books about education,

     

    teaching methods or pedagogy. They are all religious works.

     

    Third, plaintiff presents no evidence that any of these

     

    books are considered “scholarly work” by others in the field

     

    of education. He asserts that he has submitted evidence

     

    that his “methodologies have been widely cited or adopted by

     

    the professional community at large,” PI. Mem., at 50, but

     

    he does not identify either the methodologies or the

     

    “professional community at large.” He claims he has created

     

    10 According to its web site, The Light has now changed

     

    its name to Tughra Books. See

     

    (accessed June 16, 2008). The web site indicates the

     

    company publishes approximately sixty titles, all religious.

     

    18

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 18 of 26

     

    a “model of education that uses a traditional secular

     

    education to create interfaith tolerance,” PI.Mem., at 51,

     

    but does not explain what is new, innovative or different

     

    about “traditional secular education.” Traditional secular

     

    education has been the norm in the United States since the

     

    founding of the Republic. In any case, plaintiff points to

     

    no evidence of what his “methodologies” are and no evidence

     

    that anyone outside his movement has adopted them.

     

    Plaintiff claims that “major national and international

     

    conferences focus on Mr. Gulen’s work in the field of

     

    religious tolerance and education.” PI. Mem., at 54.

     

    Plaintiff has presented no evidence that any of the

     

    conferences which focused on his work were major; indeed, at

     

    least some of them appear to have been sponsored by groups

     

    associated with him. Further, none of the conferences cited

     

    focused on plaintiff’s work in the field of education.

     

    Plaintiff bootstraps from his claims that major

     

    conferences focused on his work in the field of education to

     

    the conclusion that ” [a]s his articles and books were the

     

    subject of this major international conference where his

     

    theories were presented and debated, there is substantial

     

    evidence in the record that his books and articles can be

     

    19

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 19 of 26

     

    considered ‘scholarly’ in and of themselves.” PI. Mem., at

     

    52. This is a logical fallacy. Scholars study the work of

     

    medieval guilds; that does not make the artisans’ work in

     

    carpentry or masonry “scholarly.” Scientists study the work

     

    of the honey bee; that does not make honeycombs “scholarly.”

     

    Plaintiff argues that his work must be scholarly

     

    because it is the subject of “coursework” (as opposed to

     

    courses) at universities. Pi. Mem., at 55. All of the

     

    courses cited, however, (none of which focus on plaintiff

     

    exclusively) are courses on religion or political science.

     

    None of these address the subject of education. Even if

     

    plaintiff were correct in his assumption that study of one’s

     

    work at the university level suggests that one’s work is

     

    scholarly, that would still not make plaintiff an expert in

     

    education. At most it would make him an expert in religion

     

    or political science.

     

    Plaintiff goes on to state that w[a]cademics at major

     

    universities focus on his work in religious tolerance and

     

    education and have made Mr. Gulen’s work the subject of

     

    entire courses.” PI. Mem., at 56. This statement is

     

    completely unsupported by any evidence. Plaintiff can point

     

    to no entire courses devoted to his work; nor has he

     

    20

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 20 of 26

     

    identified any “major universities” where his work is the

     

    subject of entire courses.

     

    Plaintiff insists that he “has submitted substantial

     

    evidence that he has authored scholarly articles in the

     

    field of religious tolerance and education.” Pi. Mem., at

     

    60. It is important to bear in mind that plaintiff is not

     

    seeking a preferential visa based on his expertise in

     

    religious tolerance; he is seeking preferential treatment

     

    because he claims to be an alien of unusual ability in the

     

    field of education. And despite his repeated, conclusory

     

    assertions to the contrary, he has not submitted any

     

    evidence that he has authored scholarly articles in the

     

    field of education. He has not identified one single book

     

    or article authored by himself (scholarly or not) in the

     

    field of education. The evidence of record amply supports

     

    the agency’s determination that plaintiff did not meet the

     

    criterion set forth in 8 C.F.R. § 204(h) (3) (vi) (authorship

     

    of scholarly articles in the field).

     

    Plaintiff argues that his speeches constitute evidence

     

    of display of his work in the field of education at artistic

     

    exhibitions or showcases. Pi. Mem., at 61; 8 C.F.R.

     

    § 204(h)(3)(vii). Congress obviously intended this section

     

    21

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 21 of 26

     

    to apply to artwork; simply calling speech venues

     

    “showcases” does not make his speeches into works displayed

     

    at artistic exhibitions and showcases.

     

    More importantly, the record contains absolutely no

     

    evidence relating to plaintiff’s speeches. There are no

     

    transcripts of speeches, no audio or video recordings of his

     

    speeches; there are not even any first-hand accounts of his

     

    speeches. Even if a speech venue were a “showcase” as

     

    contemplated by the regulation, the agency could not

     

    favorably evaluate plaintiff’s claim to have showcased his

     

    work by making speeches without some evidence that he made

     

    any speeches and some evidence of the content of those

     

    speeches.

     

    Plaintiff also tries to fit the conferences at which

     

    his work was discussed into the “artistic exhibitions and

     

    showcases” category. Defendants believe the language of the

     

    regulation unambiguously refers to displays of artwork.

     

    Nevertheless, even if the term “showcase” could be tortured

     

    into meaning “conference,” plaintiff would not meet this

     

    criterion, because his work was not displayed at any of the

     

    cited conferences. Other people’s work, not plaintiff’s,

     

    was presented. Plaintiff’s work was discussed. Showcase

     

    22

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 22 of 26

     

    does not mean conference; display does not mean discuss.

     

    The agency properly found plaintiff did not meet the

     

    requirements under subsection (vii).

     

    Plaintiff argues that he meets the criterion set forth

     

    in subsection (viii) because he is “the leader of the Gulen

     

    Movement,” a founder of the Institute for Interfaith Dialog,

     

    the founder of the Journalists and Writers Foundation and

     

    the honorary president of the Niagara Forum and the Rumi

     

    Forum. PI. Mem., at 64, 67. First, the evidence submitted

     

    by plaintiff indicates that the Gulen movement is not an

     

    organization, but a loose network of projects inspired by

     

    Gulen. See, e.g.. Ex. A at 00057. The Gulen movement, the

     

    Institute for Interfaith Dialog, and the Journalists and

     

    Writers Foundation were all created by plaintiff. Plaintiff

     

    plays no “organic” role in the Rumi Forum or the Niagara

     

    Forum A.R. 00192, 00196. Because plaintiff has not provided

     

    evidence that he meets the requirements of 8 C.F.R.

     

    § 204(h)(3)(viii), the AAO’s decision with respect to this

     

    criterion was not arbitrary or capricious.

     

    Finally, plaintiff has failed to provide any evidence

     

    that he will continue to work in the field of education

     

    prospectively, as required under Section 203(b)(1)(A)(ii) of

     

    23

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 23 of 26

     

    the INA. Plaintiff did not bother to fill in the section on

     

    his petition relating to prospective plans. A.R. 00243-

     

    00245. He thereafter submitted an affidavit to rectify the

     

    omission. The following passage is the only information

     

    relating to plaintiff’s prospective plans in the entire

     

    record:

     

    Should my permanent residency be granted, it is my

     

    intention to continue performing scholarly

     

    research, advising other academics, and consulting

     

    on conferences about my work. My presence in the

     

    United States [] will allow me to continue to

     

    advocate and promote interfaith dialogue and

     

    harmony between members of different faiths and

     

    religions.

     

    A.R. 01053.

     

    This is not the detailed plan required by the

     

    regulations. Equally importantly, it has nothing whatever

     

    to do with education. Plaintiff has never performed

     

    scholarly research in the field of education. He has never

     

    advised other academics in the field of education. And

     

    consulting on conferences about his own work is essentially

     

    continuing to promote himself and his movement by paying

     

    academics to write papers about him. None of this can be

     

    considered continuing to perform outstanding work in the

     

    field of education.

     

    24

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 24 of 26

     

    Conclusion

     

    The evidence of record discloses that plaintiff failed

     

    to carry his burden of providing evidence that he is a

     

    person of extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts,

     

    education, business, or athletics. He also failed to meet

     

    his burden of providing evidence that he seeks to continue

     

    work in the area of extraordinary ability while in the

     

    United States. As a result, the agency’s denial of his visa

     

    application was neither arbitrary, nor capricious, nor

     

    contrary to law. Further, the decision was supported by

     

    substantial evidence, and should be affirmed.

     

    Respectfully submitted,

     

    PATRICK L. MEEHAN

     

    United States Attorney

     

    A, GIBSON

     

    Chief, Civil Division

     

    MARY CATHERINE FRYE

     

    Assistant U.S. Attorne;

     

    615 Chestnut Street

     

    Philadelphia, PA 19106

     

    (215) 861-8323

     

    (215) 861-8349 (fax)

     

    mary.Catherine.frye@usdoj.qov

     

    Dated: June 18, 2008

     

    25

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 25 of 26

     

    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

     

    I hereby certify that on this date I caused a true and

     

    correct copy of the foregoing Response to Plaintiff’s Motion

     

    for Summary Judgment to be served by first class United

     

    States mail, postage prepaid, upon the following:

     

    H. Ronald Klasko, Esquire

     

    Theodore Murphy, Esquire

     

    Klasko, Rulon, Stock & Seltzer, LLP

     

    1800 J.F. Kennedy Blvd.

     

    Suite 1700

     

    Philadelphia, PA 19103

     

    MARY CATHERINE FRYE J

     

    Assistant U.S. Attorney

     

    Dated: June 18, 2008

     

    Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD Document 31 Filed 06/18/2008 Page 26 of 26

     

  • Kurdish village Akre’s last Muslim with Jewish roots wants to visit family in Israel

    Kurdish village Akre’s last Muslim with Jewish roots wants to visit family in Israel

    AKRE, Iraq, May 24 (AFP) – Hajj Khalil is the last Muslim with Jewish roots in the Iraqi Kurdish village of Akre. One of his dearest wishes is to travel to Israel to apologise to his cousins for failing in his duties as a host when they visited him five years ago.

    “In 2000, several of them came to see me and I didn’t even greet them, let alone invite them to stay. Despite the autonomy enjoyed by Kurdistan, Saddam Hussein had spies everywhere,” says Khalil Fakih Ahmed, a 74-year-old wearing the traditional Kurdish headdress.

    In Akre, a large cluster of hillside houses some 420 kilometres (260 miles) north of Baghdad, near the border with Turkey, place names are one of the few reminders of the former Jewish presence.

    The last Jews in the region left Iraq between 1949 and 1951, just after the creation of the state of Israel.

    One block of houses is still called Shusti — or ‘Jewish town’ in Kurdish — but the old synagogue was destroyed long ago.

    In the mountains overlooking the town lies a plateau called Zarvia Dji (Land of the Jews) where the Jewish community used to gather for celebrations.

    “My grandmother converted to Islam when her husband died and my father had just turned 10,” Hajj Khalil recalls, sitting in his garden with his children and grandchildren around him.

    “When the Jews left, we stayed because we had become Muslims.”

    But in the streets of Akre, Khalil and his family are still called “the Jews”.

    “If you ask for Izzat or Selim in the street, nobody will know who you’re talking about,” says the old man’s 19-year-old grandson. “But if you say ‘Izzat the Jew’, they’ll know immediately.”

    According to the United Nations, some 150,000 Jews still lived in Iraq just after World War II, several thousand of them in Kurdistan.

    Former Israeli defence minister Yitzhak Mordechai was born in Akre.

    In 1999, Khalil’s cousin Itzhak Ezra, who lives in the northern Israeli city of Tiberias, arrived in Akre.

    “We told the neighbours he was a Turkish trucker who needed a place to sleep. But Itzhak met an old friend who recognised him after half a century.”

    “Luckily, his friend said nothing and the story was kept secret,” he says.

    A few weeks after returning to Israel, the long-lost cousin sent a letter to thank Khalil for his hospitality.

    “Saddam’s spies found out and arrested our brother-in-law who lived in Mosul,” southwest of Akre, says Saber, one of Khalil’s sons.

    Saber went to see the intelligence services in an attempt to secure his relative’s release but was arrested and detained for a month in Baghdad.

    “They interrogated me, I pretended to be illiterate and demented. Then they offered me a passport to go and spy for them in Israel before eventually releasing me,” Saber says.

    Between 1991 and the March 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, some Israelis were able to reach this area in autonomous Kurdistan through the Turkish border. But Saddam retained intelligence agents in the region until the fall of his regime.

    “When my cousins came to visit me” in 2000, “they didn’t understand why we would not meet them but I could not explain it to them. They were very offended and left,” Hajj Khalil remembers.

    Since then, he has had no contact with his relatives. “My father is hoping to go and see them to resolve this misunderstanding,” his son Izzat says.

    Source: www.kerkuk-kurdistan.com [sic.]