Tag: Gulen

  • Turkish Lies at “Anatolian Festival” Greeted by Worldwide Condemnation

    Turkish Lies at “Anatolian Festival” Greeted by Worldwide Condemnation


    By Appo Jabarian
    Executive Publisher / Managing Editor
    USA Armenian Life Magazine


    Friday,  April 10, 2009

    Last week, this writer reported about the widespread misrepresentations made by Turkey, the main organizer of the so-called “Anatolian Cultures and Food Festival” which took place in Costa Mesa, California, April 2-5.
    Soon after the publication in USA Armenian Life Magazine and the electronic dissemination of the article titled “An Orgy of Turkish Soup with Armenian Bones in Southern California,” the editorial offices were inundated with several phone calls, and letters via e-mail, fax and regular mail by angry readers. They were speaking out against Turkey’s lies about its history, culture and cuisine.

    Several Southern California Armenian and non-Armenian activists rallied their resources and, in less then 24 hours, successfully produced life-size, full color giant posters of a live art presentation of the “Turkish Soup Made with Armenian Bones.” The “Turkish Soup” is created by well-known artist Zareh of Los Angeles (To see a live art presentation on Turkish Soup, please click on the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urWCGtI7XXc).

    The “Turkish Soup” along with life-size posters of Pres. Ronald Reagan and Amb. John Evans (both acknowledging the genocide) and “Mustafa Kemal Ataturk” (Founder of modern Turkey strongly condemning Young Turk government’s crime against the Armenians) were carried by a contingent of Armenian activists to Orange County’s fairgrounds to post them at the entrance of the misleading Turkish festival.


    Even the Consul General of the Republic of Armenia in Los Angeles declined to accept the official invitation extended by the Consul General of Turkey in Los Angeles.

    According to various reliable reports, the Turkish Consul General had sent invitations to a number of consuls general, including Armenia’s top diplomatic representative in Los Angeles, Honorable Grigor Hovanessian.

    USA Armenian Life learned that Mr. Hovanessian declined to participate in the opening ceremonies of the Turkish festival.

    Responding to a question presented by USA Armenian Life as to why the Armenian Consul General refused to accept the Turkish invitation, he responded: “The reasons for Consul General’s non-participation in the festival: 1) The agenda throughout April is intense, as the Consulate General along with the entire Armenian community prepares for the Genocide commemorative events. The Consul General considered the timing for this festive event highly inappropriate from the Armenian point of view; 2) Members of the Armenian community across the widest spectrum were consulted on this matter and their positions were factored in while making the decision. In addition, the Consul General fully shares the disagreements voiced in the local Armenian media and professionals as to the distortion of historic facts by the organizers of the festival.”

    French-Armenian journalist Gilbert Béguian, a regular contributor to France’s Nouvelles d’Armenie Magazine, wrote: “I prefer to think that the Armenians of Turkey undergo direct pressures that lead them to act as they do. … The case of Diaspora Armenians is different.”

    Beguian added: “I have just completed the translation (into French-Ed.) of your article and truly I’d like to compliment you for the force and the spirit that it emanates. … The video and the idea of Zareh’s ‘Turkish Soup’ is genius. They transmit the message in a blink of an eye, in matter of few seconds. Let’s hope that many Turks see it.”

    Janine A. Soukiasian, a well-known criminal defense attorney in Southern California wrote: “I was moved by your article on ‘An Orgy of ‘Turkish Soup with Armenian Bones’ in Southern California.’ …I strongly agree that the denialist Turks are trying to shove down our throat, literally, in a month of commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, their so-called Turkish culture and food. This is a definite slap in the face. I am not sure I can blame some Armenians if they truly feel the need to participate ‘under duress and fear of being subjected to all kinds of blackmail in Turkey,’ if this event was taking place in TURKEY. However, we live in America and we don’t face duress and should not make any excuses for supporting the denialists in our home turf of Southern California.”

    She concluded: “The OIA [Organization of Istanbul Armenians] must be very careful in who they trust and the company they keep. I think all Armenians should ban future misleading Turkish Festivals altogether. It is a shame if a single Armenian attends the event, particularly in the month of April.”

    Gary Bedian, an international entrepreneur-developer, and Southland activist, wrote: “While at first glance one may wonder what the whole fuss is about Turks holding an ‘Anatolian Cultures and Food Festival’ in the City of Costa Mesa, one must dig deeper to understand its true significance. The Turkish Ministry of Culture, along with the government of Turkey, denies the Armenian Genocide. The City of Costa Mesa, as part of The State of California that officially recognizes the Armenian Genocide, should not have issued a permit for a misleading event of this nature to take place on its soil.”

    Bedian continued: “Adding insult to injury, the City of Costa Mesa has hosted this event in the month of April which is a sacred month for Armenians who have suffered genocide at the hands of Turkey.”
    He concluded: “It remains to be seen if Turkey will now do the right thing and take up President Obama’s challenge to recognize the genocide and normalize relations with Armenia. After all, one must act European before he can become European.”

    Reiterating Armenian demands for justice, Jean Eckian, a Paris-based French Armenian independent journalist, wrote: “Our ancestors sacrificed their lives for the soil of Turkish-occupied Western Armenia. They have built a treasure, a civilization of which we, the descendants, are the inheritors. In this context, it doesn’t matter as to how far and to which foreign ports we have navigated. Till the end of time, we will reclaim in their memory, and for our sake, the right to return so that the Armenian spirit continues to live.”

    Southern California Armenian and non-Armenian activists who made timely contribution of valuable time, energy and material included Kalayjian Enterprises’ Krikor “Cigar Koko” Kalayjian and his sons Minas and Hagop, along with their assistant Raul Vizcaino, a Mexican-American activist opposing all genocides.

    When Vizcaino was approached to pose like a genocidal Turk for the photography of life-size “Turkish Soup,” he adamantly refused saying that he strongly dislikes the Turks. He said: “Those Turks are bad. They are responsible for what they did to Armenians. Their genocidal act of 1915 has affected the rest of the world. Had the world punished those ‘Los Turcos’ and Turkey for their genocide against the Armenians, no other genocides would have been committed, such as the one in Darfur.”

    Later Vizcaino agreed to dress up like a Turk to help the Armenian Cause, and in solemn respect to the memory of the innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide.

    The additional contributors to the 11th hour Armenian efforts for protest actions also included United Shipping Group’s Gagik Tamrazyan and his assistants; Calprod giant size poster printing company’s Harout Hovsepyan; fellow activists Vasgen Zargarian, Ardavast M., Emelda M. and Diana Aslan, who have valiantly carried the life size and somewhat heavy pressedwood-enforced posters to the main entrance of the infamous festival; Karine Mkrtumyan who assisted in graphics, and Hagop Yedalian and his son Razmik along with their assistants who volunteered their time and energy in helping Hagop perform woodcarving to create life-size wood sculptured posters of the “Turkish Soup.” Yedalian’s assistants –Rigoberto, Reyes, David, Manuel, and Oswaldo, coming from various Latino-American backgrounds, explained the widespread Latino disdain of the genocidal Turks. Several of them explained that fellow Latinos when intending to insult a man they would label him as “Turco!”

    All felt both a moral duty to help the cause of the one and a half million Armenian martyrs by joining the efforts and were also touched by the spiritual blessings that they were receiving as a result of their service to keeping the memory of the 1.5 million martyred saints alive.

    Their spirit of solidarity and their determination now may serve as a forewarning of what’s to come in the form of future tsunami of Armenian-led protests against denialist Turkey and its Southland lackeys.

    Several Armenian American community leaders representing various organizations privately expressed exasperation at the Organization of Istanbul Armenians Los Angeles chapter’s participation. They have vowed to react vociferously if they continue to side with the denialist Turkish government in the free world of the Armenian Diaspora.

    The few fast-acting Armenian activists’ reactions should send a clear signal to Turkey, that as long as Ankara refuses to make amends to the Armenians, its public relations ploys on the world stage are doomed not only to fail but to be counter-productive.

    (To see a live art presentation on Turkish Soup, please click on the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urWCGtI7XXc).

  • Turkey’s Islamist Danger

    Turkey’s Islamist Danger

    A response to Rachel Sharon-Krespin’s ‘Fethullah Gülen’s Grand Ambition: Turkey’s Islamist Danger’ (2)

    GREG BARTON, Ph.D.

    ADJUNCT PROFESSOR

    Area of Expertise – Southeast Asia

    ——————————————————

    orijinal publication of Rachel krespin can be found with the following link

    https://www.meforum.org/2045/fethullah-gulens-grand-ambition

    Veya turkce icin asagidaki link e tiklayip turkce okuyabilirsiniz

    https://www.meforum.org/2071/fethullah-gulenin-buyuk-ihtirasi

    greg barton is A writer in fetullah gulen web side(*)

    It is deeply misleading and offensive to claim that “Fethullah Gülen is an imam who considers himself a prophet.” This is a very strong assertion but the evidence given in support of it does not go beyond hearsay and is certainly entirely out of keeping with the vast corpus of material published by and about Gülen.

    Were it to be true it would involve both a vast conspiracy of silence and profound doctrinal deviation on the part of the millions involved with the movement. This is frankly not plausible.

    It is also misleading to say that Gülen’s “formal education is limited to five years of elementary school.” It is true that his early classroom education was cut short when his family moved to the village of Alvarli in the impoverished province of Erzurum. Conditions in Turkey’s mountainous far east in the 1940s was difficult. But it is noteworthy that Gülen went on to complete the official imam hatip exams and graduate from secondary school. Gülen certainly benefited from his studies with well-established Islamic scholars, but he is also a voracious reader and autodidact. A prolific author accomplished at writing for both ordinary laypeople and for scholars his Quranic scholarship and studies of Said Nursi are highly regarded by academic experts.

    By any measure he is not just one Turkey’s most significant contemporary intellectuals but also one of the world’s leading modern Islamic intellectuals. It is, of course, reasonable to disagree with him, but it is foolish to dismiss him as a lightweight.

    Sharon-Krespin makes brief reference to Nursi. She is correct in associating Gülen with Nursi’s legacy, but the way in which she discusses Nursi’s views suggests either deep prejudice or deep ignorance.

    It is not clear where Sharon-Krespin gets the ideas that Gülen’s followers “even refrain from marrying until age fifty per his instructions.” Her account suggests a dour and joyless community earnestly following their leader’s instructions without thinking for themselves. As a scholar of religion, I fully acknowledge that such groups do exist (including within the world of Protestant Christianity with which I am associated), but in my observation the Gülen movement is not such a group. In my dealings with members of the movement, I am struck by their consistent good humor and occasionally even mischievous sense of fun. These are people who love life and enjoy each others’ company. Yes, they do tend to dress in a more conservative fashion — although not exclusively so — which is hardly surprising given the social origins of the movement and, like the vast majority of observant Muslims around the world, they do not drink alcohol. But to spend time in their company is to be reminded that one needs neither alcohol nor secular cool to enjoy laughter and good humor. Social conservatism is not necessarily a sign of fundamentalism.

    The Gülen movement’s contributions to education are indeed impressive but seem more than a little exaggerated here. And presenting them as being part of an “education jihad” based on indoctrination is more than a little unfair as it grossly misrepresents the consistently secular content of what is taught in the classrooms and the overall ethos of the schools. Different scholars will, naturally enough, have different positions on this. My own position, having observed the movement over the past five years is that it represents precisely the sort of non-Islamist, progressive, civil society movement that Muslim world needs at this point in history if it is to engage with democratic, secular, modernity. In my reading, the educational programs can be understood as broadly paralleling earlier examples of Christian and Jewish educational philanthropy in the West.

    Perhaps this makes me a non-credible observer as one of the many “friends, ideological fellow-travellers, and co-opted journalists and academics.” If that is the case, it would appear that I am in good company.

    [*] Professor Greg Barton is a Herb Feith research professor for the study of Indonesia and acting director at the Centre for Islam and the Modern World.

    11 February 2009, Wednesday
    GREG BARTON [*]
    (*)

    GREG BARTON WRITE UP IN FETULLAH GULENS WEB SITE

    Batı, İslamı Araplar Üzerinden Tanıyor!
    Aksiyon
    25.10.2004
    Dr. Greg Barton: “İslamiyetin temel bakış açısı Hıristiyanlık veya Yahudilikten çok farklı değil. Avrupa’da Yahudi ve Hıristiyan toplumlar demokrasiyi kurabiliyorsa, pekala İslam toplumları da bunu yapabilir. Bu mümkündür ve olması gerekir.”

    İslam—demokrasi ilişkisi birçok akademisyenin üzerinde kafa yorduğu bir konu. Özellikle 11 Eylül saldırıları, bu ilişki üzerindeki tartışmaları daha da yoğunlaştırdı. Sadece Müslüman ilim adamları değil, birçok Batılı akademisyen de “İslam demokrasiyi kapsar mı, yoksa onunla çatışır mı?” sorusuna cevap arıyor. Batı’daki siyasî kültürde önemli bir yeri bulunan Hıristiyan demokrat partilerin, Müslüman demokrat adıyla ülkemizdeki siyasal kültüre taşınıp taşınamayacağı da tartışmanın diğer boyutunu oluşturuyor. Hatta bu çerçevede AK Parti’nin, “muhafazakar demokrat” olarak belirlediği kimlik tanımı, Müslüman demokrat partiler tartışmasına da yeni bir boyut kazandırmış durumda.

    Bir süredir Türkiye ve ülkemizdeki Müslüman gelenek üzerine çalışmalar yapan Avustralya Deakin Üniversitesi Öğretim Üyesi Prof. Dr. Greg Barton, İslam ve demokrasi ilişkisine kafa yoran isimlerden. Onun konuya yaklaşımı basit, ama etkili: “Ben bir Protestan olarak kendi inancımın ışığında İslam—demokrasi ilişkisini değerlendiriyorum. Bana göre İslamiyetin temel bakış açısı Hıristiyanlık veya Yahudilikten çok farklı değil. Avrupa’da Yahudi ve Hıristiyan toplumlar demokrasiyi kurabiliyorsa, pekala İslam toplumları da bunu yapabilir. Bu mümkündür ve olması gerekir.”

    Barton’un İslam’a ilgisi lise yıllarında Hindistan’a yaptığı bir ziyaretle başlar. Doktora tezini Asya ülkeleri üzerine yapar ve Endonezya’daki İslamî hareketi analiz eder. Barton, bu ülkeyi Türkiye’ye benzetiyor ve toplumsal gücün yüksekliğine işaret ediyor. Portre çalışması yaptığı Endonezya Devlet eski Başkanı Abdurrahman Vahid’i İslam’la demokrasinin uyumuna örnek gösteren Barton, her iki ülkede de modern hareketin ve demokratik düşüncenin Müslüman gruplardan çıktığı tespitini yapıyor. Türkiye’den örnek olarak da Bediüzzaman Said Nursi ve Fethullah Gülen’i veriyor. Bu iki ismi, geleneksel İslam’dan gelen; ancak modern düşünceye sahip dinî önderler olarak tanımlayan Greg Barton, Abdurrahman Vahid’i de aynı kategoride ele alıyor.

    Her üç ismin, geleneksel İslamı temsil etmelerine rağmen moderniteye yakın görüşleri ile etkili olduklarını söyleyen Barton, Said Nursi, Gülen ve Vahid’in din—devlet ayrımını desteklemelerine dikkati çekiyor. 20. yüzyıldaki İslamî düşünürlerin devletin değişmesi, şeriatın gelmesi ve bir İslam devleti kurulmasını savunduklarını hatırlatarak ekliyor: “Halbuki Said Nursi ve Fethullah Gülen bireyin dönüşümünü önemsiyor, eğitime büyük önem veriyorlar. Böylelikle modern bilim eğitimini klasik İslamî bilimlerle birleştiriyorlar. Eski fıkhî konulara ve bunların yorumlarına takılıp kalmış değiller. Onun yerine iman ve inanç gibi İslamiyet’in asıl meseleleriyle ilgileniyorlar.”

    Greg Barton’un üzerinde durduğu konulardan biri de, Batı dünyasındaki İslam imajı. Bu konuda çok dertli. Batı’da İslam imajı denilince, hemen “İçine düştüğümüz çukur bundan kaynaklanıyor” diyerek söze giriyor. Onun şikayeti bu imajı belirleyenin büyük oranda Arap âlemi olması. Batı’da İslam’ın doğrudan Araplarla bağdaştırıldığını söyleyen Barton, ciddi bir reform sürecinden geçmeyen ve baskıcı rejimlere sahip Arap âleminin İslamiyet için bir imaj kırıcı olduğunu vurguluyor. İslam hakkındaki görüşünü Araplara bakarak belirleyen Batı’nın, bu dünyadaki İslamî hareketlerin tamamını radikal ve yer altı örgütleri olarak gördüğünü söylüyor. Prof. Dr. Barton, bu problemin çözülebilmesi için Batı dünyasının Türkiye ve Endonezya gibi ülkelerden öğreneceği çok şey olduğunu sözlerine ekliyor.

    Peki Arap ülkeleri dışındaki Müslüman toplumlar neden Batı dünyasında fazla tanınmıyor? Greg Barton, önyargılar ve subjektif yaklaşımlar dışında bu sorunun en temel sebebini dil problemi olarak görüyor. İngilizcenin halen bu iki ülkede yeteri kadar yaygın olmadığını hatırlatarak, “Geleneksel olarak Batıda bir araştırmacı İslamiyet’i öğrenmek istediğinde Arapça öğrenir. Bu yüzden de İslam dünyasını araştıran uzmanlar Araplar’a bakarak Türkiye, Malezya ve Endonezya gibi ülkeleri atlıyor” diyor. Samuel Hantington’ın medeniyetler çatışması tezini eleştiren Barton, Amerikalı akademisyenin İslam âleminde azınlığı temsil eden radikal gruplara yönelik değerlendirmelerini genele mal etme çabası içinde olduğunu söylüyor.

    Türkiye’de gerek dinler gerekse kültürlerarası diyalog konusunda büyük bir istek gözlemlediğini belirten Barton, “Gördüğüm kadarıyla Said Nursi Risale—i Nur ile çok güzel bir zemin oluşturdu. Fethullah Gülen ise bu zeminin üzerine taşları dikiyor. Said Nursi imkanları bakımından daha kısıtlıydı, dar ve küçük çevrelerde hayatını yaşamak zorunda kalmıştı. Fakat Gülen’in öğrencileri dünyanın her yerine dağılmış ve aktif şekilde diyalog çalışmalarını destekliyor. Bu gerçekten bütün dünyanın ihtiyacı olan bir çalışmadır” diyor.

    Türkiye’nin AB Üyeliği Avrupa’yı da Geliştirecek

    Türkiye’nin AB’ye katılımı için çok güzel gerekçeleri olduğunu söyleyen Greg Barton, bu üyelikten her iki tarafından da önemli çıkarları olacağı tespitini yapıyor. Türkiye’nin katılımının Avrupa’yı da geliştireceğinin atlanmaması gerektiğini vurguluyor. AK Parti hükümetinin Avrupa’ya yönelik çabalarını da olumlu buluyor. Greg Barton’un dikkat çektiği hususlardan biri de, sekülerizmle din ilişkisi. Ona göre İslamî toplumların yaşadığı modernleşme süreci sadece sekülerizme götüren bir süreç değil ve modernite de dinin bir alternatifi olamaz. Bu konuya en iyi örneğin eski Sovyetler Birliği olduğunu söylüyor: “Eski SSCB’de din yok edilmeye çalışıldı ama bunu kimse başaramadı. Komünizm dahi dini yok edemedi. Asıl soru şu: Din modernleşmeye yardımcı mı olacak yoksa bir engel mi? Gülen hareketinin önemi bu noktada ortaya çıkıyor. Bu gibi hareketler İslamî toplumların yaşadığı reform sürecinin devamlı olmasına katkı sağlıyor. Çünkü Gülen hareketi devleti değiştirmekten ziyade daha çok bireye yönelik çalışıyor. Savaş ve kavgadan yana değil, barış, uzlaşma ve diyalogdan yana tavır alıyor. Barışçı kavramları öne çıkarıyor ve bunları devamlı olarak savunuyor.” (Zafer Özcan)

  • An Orgy of “Turkish Soup With Armenian Bones” in Southern California

    An Orgy of “Turkish Soup With Armenian Bones” in Southern California

    By Appo Jabarian
    Executive Publisher / Managing Editor
    USA Armenian Life Magazine

    Friday,  April 3, 2009

    Can you believe that right here in Southern California the denialist Turkish government is organizing the so-called “Anatolian Cultures and Food Festival?”

    Are you shocked that besides the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Turkey, the sponsors also include the Organization of Istanbul Armenians?

    During the recent years Turkey has been leading a multi-pronged campaign against Armenians for the sole purpose of obstructing justice.

    While some of these Turkish campaigns are being carried out by denialist Turks alone, some others are being executed with the naïve or involuntary participation of some of the victims, the Armenians.

    Turkey has long been attempting to fool the international community that it is well on its way to forging lasting peace with its neighbor, Armenia, by creating the false impression that it is “seriously” engaged in “dialogue with Armenians.” But in reality these so-called “dialogues” serve as a pretext to derail other nations’ legislative activities relating to their official recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

    Turkey also is desperately seeking to lure the Armenians of the Diaspora into these false “dialogues” by way of panel “discussions,” joint “lectures,” “friendly” internet discussion groups such the armworkshop at the University of Michigan, among others.

    Outdoing itself, Turkey has initiated through its Ministry of Culture and Tourism the Orange County, CA festival which has already cost over $2.5 million.

    An initial look at the name of the organizing entity creates the impression that a major American organization called “Pacifica Institute” is the one that is presenting this festival. But a careful research reveals that Pacifica Institute is none other than the former Global Cultural Connections, which was founded in 2003 by S. California’s Turkish-American apologists of Ankara.

    Despite masquerading as an innocent third party, Pacifica Institute confesses that its objective in organizing the “Anatolian Cultures and Food Festival” is “to introduce Turkey and Turkish culture in a unique way, from past to present.”

    What Anatolian cuisine when that “cuisine” is a set of misappropriated recipes from the martyred Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Arabs, and others during the Genocide?

    The current Anatolian cuisine is nothing more that Turkish soup made with Armenian, Greek and Assyrian bones. (To see a live art presentation on Turkish Soup, please click on the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urWCGtI7XXc. The live art is designed by well-known Artist Zareh of Los Angeles, the descendant of a genocide survivor. The presentation has been widely featured by the mainstream American media since 2003).

    What Anatolia with its turkified name “Anadolu,” when in fact that vast region east of Byzantine includes none other than Western Armenia with its Armenian Highlands; Armenian Cilicia; Greek Constantinople, Pontus and Smyrna; Kurdish Media and Assyrian Merdin?

    What Turkish culture, when in fact the Seljuk (later called Turkish) hordes of the Steppes of Central Asia invaded Armenia, in 1071AD and forcibly subjected the indigenous people to turkification and stole their traditions only to turn around and market them as their own?

    They literally stole the indigenous people’s babies to create the Ottoman Janissary Army; stole their cuisine to form the Turkish cuisine; and finally stole their lands through genocide to “build” today’s Turkey — the last vestige of the dismantled Turkish Ottoman Empire.

    And now, shamelessly, they are distorting the identity of Armenian towns such as Van, as “a Turkish city.” They are distorting the holy name of Akhtamar Armenian Apostolic Church as “Akdamar” (meaning “white vein” in Turkish, the turkified name of the church and the island located in Lake Van. But the original “Akhtamar” pronunciation in Armenian expresses “Akh” meaning “Oh!” and “Tamar,” the name of an Armenian girl).

    They have the guts to come to California and show-off their “Traditional Ottoman Janissary” band, reigniting the troubling memories of the infamous hordes of henchmen that were made up by kidnapped Armenian, Greek, Assyrian, Kurdish, and Arab boys. The Janissaries were used against their original ethnic groups in order to force them into slavery.

    They have a lot of “courage” to come here to “sell” their loots, confiscated from Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians and others during their genocidal campaigns of 1915-1923, as Turkish cultural novelties. And guess who – among others – is voluntarily or involuntarily cooperating with them? The Organization of Istanbul Armenians!

    And when are they throwing this orgy of Turkish Soup with Armenian bones? During the month of April, the month of worldwide commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

    Understandably, several members of the Los Angeles Armenian community have strongly criticized OIA’s central board members. One may ask, where is OIA’s central board based? In Istanbul! It is obvious that they have “agreed” to participate under duress and fear of being subjected to all kinds of blackmail in Turkey — another gross human rights violation!

    Ankara must be reminded loud and clear that no matter how hard it tries to shove under the rug the memory of Turkey’s guilt in the Armenian Genocide, today’s and coming Armenian generations around the world will remember and continue their quest for justice.
    In the absence of genuine Turkish will to make amends to Armenians, Ankara’s ploys will be unmasked and many more millions of dollars will go down the drain of denialism.

  • CALIFORNIA: KREKORIAN INTRODUCES AB 961 IN SACRAMENTO PUNISHING THOSE DOING BUSINESS WITH TURKEY OR AZERBAIJAN !!!:

    CALIFORNIA: KREKORIAN INTRODUCES AB 961 IN SACRAMENTO PUNISHING THOSE DOING BUSINESS WITH TURKEY OR AZERBAIJAN !!!:

    Dostlar,

    Birgun donup dolasip gelecegi nokta buydu…

    Eger bu Ermeni yasasi Sacramento’da gecerse Turkiye ve Azerbaycan ile ticaret yapan firmalar suclu sayilacak ve ceza odeyecek. Buyurun bakalim.  Yillar suren sessizligimize, “Bana ne canim, baskalari yapsin” zihniyetine bicilen aci bir fiatdir bu.

    180px Sacramento Capitol

    Asagida Karahan Mete’nin yazdigi ilk ve tek mektup. Bu is birkac kisinin isi degil, butun toplumun isi.  Hatta, Turkiye’mizin de isi.

    Neye uzuluyorum en cok biliyor musunuz?

    Su satirlari yazdigim anda Kaliforniya’nin en buyuk Turk Festivali’nin acilisinin yapilmasina 3 gun kalmis. Costa Mesa’daki Orange County Fair alanina duzinelerce Turk marangoz, asci-sef, ve is adami gelmis. Kaliforniya otelleri Turk dolu.  Hepsi ticareti nasil patlatiriz diye umut ve heyecan dolu dolu gelmisler.  Halbuki Sacramento’daki bir Ermeni “kardesimiz” onlar icin, bizler icin, hepimiz icin daragaclarini hazirliyor, hem de benim kesemden verdigim vergilerimle!

    Bizim toplum ise masallah misil misil uykuya devam.

    Allah rahat uykular versin.

    Baska ne denir?

    Ergün KIRLIKOVALI

    TURKISH FORUM DANISMA KURULU UYESI

    BILL NUMBER: AB 961 INTRODUCED

    BILL TEXT

    INTRODUCED BY

    Assembly Member Krekorian

    FEBRUARY 26, 2009

    An act to add Article 14 (commencing with

    Section 10485) to

    Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 2 of the Public

    Contract Code,

    relating to public contracts.

    LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

    AB 961, as introduced, Krekorian.

    Public contracts: state contract

    eligibility: genocidal regimes.

    Existing law authorizes contracting between state agencies and

    private contractors and sets forth requirements for the procurement

    of goods and services by state agencies and the various

    responsibilities of state agencies and the Department of General

    Services in implementing state contracting procedures and policies.

    Existing law prohibits a scrutinized company, as defined, that is

    involved in specified activities in Sudan, from entering into a

    contract with a state agency for goods or services, subject to

    specified requirements and exemptions.

    This bill would prohibit a scrutinized company, as defined, that

    was engaged in business with perpetrators of genocide, from entering

    into a contract with a state agency for goods or services. The bill

    also would require a prospective bidder for those state contracts,

    that currently or within the previous 3 years has had business

    activities or other operations outside of the United States, to

    certify that the company is not a scrutinized company and would

    impose civil penalties, as specified, for a company that provides a

    false certification.

    The bill would allow the Director of General Services, under specified

    conditions, to permit a scrutinized company to enter into state contracts

    for goods and services.

    Vote: majority. Appropriation: no.

    Fiscal committee: yes.

    State-mandated local program: no.

    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

    SECTION 1. Article 14 (commencing with Section 10485) is added to

    Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code, to

    read:

    Article 14. Prohibition on Contracts with Companies that Aided

    Genocidal Regimes 10485. For purposes of this article, the

    following definitions apply:

    (a) “Genocide” means any of the following events:

    (1) The atrocities committed by the Ottoman and

    Turkish governments against Armenians from 1915 to 1923,

    inclusive, which constituted the Armenian Genocide, and the

    massacres of Armenians committed by the Ottoman Empire from

    1894 to 1909, inclusive.

    (2) The Holocaust committed by Nazi Germany against Jews from 1938

    to 1945, inclusive, and the persecution and massacre of Roman,

    Slavic, Polish, Soviet, disabled people, homosexuals, and political

    and religious dissidents by the Nazi regime.

    (3) The oppression, forced labor, and murder of the Cambodian

    people by the Khmer Rouge regime from 1975 to 1979, inclusive.

    (4) The aggression and ethnic cleansing committed by the Rwandan

    Hutu majority against minority Rwandan Tutsis that constituted the

    Rwandan genocide of 1994.

    (5) The aggression and ethnic cleansing committed by elements of

    the Bosnian Serb army against the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina

    from 1992 to 1995, inclusive.

    (b) “Scrutinized company” means a company, and any affiliates of

    that company, that was engaged in business with the perpetrators of

    genocide and that still holds looted or deposited assets of a victim

    of a genocide or his or her heirs.

    10485.5. (a) A scrutinized company is ineligible to, and shall

    not, bid on or submit a proposal for a contract with a state agency

    for goods or services.

    (b) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the Director of General

    Services may permit a scrutinized company, on a case-by-case basis,

    to bid on or submit a proposal for a contract with a state agency for

    goods or services, if it is in the best interests of the state to

    permit the scrutinized company to bid on or submit a proposal for one

    or more contracts with a state agency for goods or services.

    (2) In making this determination, the Director of General Services

    may consider attempts by a scrutinized company to settle claims

    against it by a victim of genocide, or his or her heirs, or evidence

    refuting those claims presented by the scrutinized company.

    10486.

    (a) A state agency shall require a company that submits a

    bid or proposal with respect to a contract for goods or services,

    that currently or within the previous three years has had business

    activities or other operations outside of the United States, to

    certify that the company is not a scrutinized company.

    (b) A state agency shall not require a company that submits a bid

    or proposal with respect to a contract for goods and services to

    certify that the company is not a scrutinized company if the company

    has obtained permission to bid on or submit a proposal for a contract

    with a state agency pursuant to subdivision (b) of

    Section 10485.5.

    10486.5. (a) If the Department of General Services determines

    that a company has submitted a false certification under Section

    10486, the company shall be subject to all of the following:

    (1) The company is liable for a civil penalty in an amount that is

    equal to the greater of two hundred fifty thousand dollars

    ($250,000) or twice the amount of the contract for which a bid or

    proposal was submitted.

    (2) The state agency or the Department of General Services may

    terminate the contract with the company.

    (3) The company is ineligible to, and shall not, bid on a state

    contract for a period of not less than three years from the date the

    state agency determines that the company submitted the false

    certification.

    (b) The Department of General Services shall report to the

    Attorney General the name of the company that the Department of

    General Services determined had submitted a false certification under

    Section 10486, together with its information as to the false

    certification, and the Attorney General shall determine whether to

    bring a civil action against the company. The company shall pay all

    costs and fees the plaintiff incurred in a civil action, including

    costs incurred by the state agency and the Department of General

    Services for investigations that led to the finding of the false

    certification and all costs and fees incurred by the Attorney

    General.

    10487. (a) If any one or more provision, section, subdivision,

    paragraph, sentence, clause, phrase, or word of this act or the

    application thereof to any person or circumstance is found to be

    invalid, illegal, unenforceable, or unconstitutional, the same is

    hereby declared to be severable and the balance of this act shall

    remain effective and functional notwithstanding such invalidity,

    illegality, unenforceability, or unconstitutionality.

    (b) The Legislature hereby declares it would have passed this act,

    and each provision, section, subdivision, paragraph, sentence,

    clause, phrase or word thereof, irrespective of the fact that any one

    or more provision, section, subdivision, paragraph, sentence,

    clause, phrase, or word be declared invalid, illegal, unenforceable,

    or unconstitutional.

    Letter sent by Karahan Mete, TP&J COM. IN CALIFORNIA:

    Turkish Peace and Justice Committee    California

    P. O. Box. 866 Sacramento, CA   95812–866 Tel: 530 297-1655 [email protected]

    AB 961***

    California Assembly member Kerkorian introduced bill AB 961.

    Simple and plain evaluation for AB 961 is: the bill basically forbids the company for betting on California government contracts if they are doing business with countries that proved or assumed to be contributed to holocaust, genocide or atrocity. In his definition, every country in the world can be accused of contributed atrocity and be barred from California government contracts. His first line of the accused countries are Germany, Italy, Austria, France, Pollen, Russia, Cambodia, Rwanda, Serbia, Turkey etc.

    While United States is struggling with huge trade deficits that cannot be sustained for a long period of time, introducing such a very poorly prepared bill will be very destructive for the US economy.

    About the US / Turkish trade relation;

    • US have trade surplus with Turkey.
    • Turkey imports from US is twice as much its export in US
    • US is Turkey’s second largest trade partner after the EU
    • Turkey buys everything from US, from potato chips to computer chips.
    • From seeds to agricultural products.
    • Turkey imports large amounts of grain, rice, corn and others
    • Turkey imports machinery parts and buys engineering and consulting services.
    • Turkey buys almost all the military equipments and parts from US
    • Turkey buys commercial and military aircraft and parts from US.
    • Some of the large utility companies involved for building energy power-plant in Turkey
    • Tourism industries rapidly growing between two countries. US hotel chains are operating hotels and resorts in Turkey.
    • Some of the California satellite-launching companies are negotiating with Turkey for getting multimillion dollar contracts.

    All these companies and others that are doing profitable business with Turkey will be barred from California Government contracts according to AB 961. This same unethical policy will be applied to countries stated in this bill (Germany, Italy, Austria, France, Pollen, Russia, Cambodia, Rwanda, Serbia, Turkey etc.).

    AB 961 is written so poorly that it will scrutinize any business and it will create out-of-control lawsuits that might cost hundreds of millions of dollars from US Companies and strain their competitiveness. In addition, AB 961 will create massive bureaucracy and position state department to undertake imposable tasks.

    At a time when all the trade organizations, Federal and state agencies are working diligently trying to improve US trade, it is hard to understand a lawmaker to take such drastic and unnecessary steps to cause distress in US economy.

    While this bill is an insult to these countries, they can take their businesses somewhere else (another country or States). AB 961 does nothing on these countries stated in this bill but will instead harm the US and California economy. Eventually, this bill will widen US trade deficits and cost US taxpayer millions of dollars, cause job losses and increase unemployment….

    In addition, we all support human rights, democracy and justice, and this bill does not contribute to world human rights, democracy or justice. On the contrary, this bill creates an unjust state of affairs for our own US Companies to compete in the world market.

    Furthermore, the AB 961 subject matter is an international state of affair. State should not be interfering or passing laws that contradict United States international affairs.

    We respectfully ask you to take all the necessary steps to prevent this destructive act against US companies and prevent devastation in US and California economy.

    Respectfully yours,

    Karahan Mete

    [email protected]

    (530) 297-1655

  • Fethullah Gülen’s Grand Ambition

    Fethullah Gülen’s Grand Ambition

    Turkey’s Islamist Danger
    by Rachel Sharon-Krespin
    Middle East Quarterly
    Winter 2009, pp. 55-66

    As Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, AKP) begins its seventh year in leadership, Turkey is no longer the secular and democratic country that it was when the party took over. The AKP has conquered the bureaucracy and changed Turkey’s fundamental identity. Prior to the AKP’s rise, Ankara oriented itself toward the United States and Europe. Today, despite the rhetoric of European Union accession, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has turned Turkey away from Europe and toward Russia and Iran and reoriented Turkish policy in the Middle East away from sympathy toward Israel and much more toward friendship with Hamas, Hezbollah, and Syria. Anti-American, anti-Christian, and anti-Semitic sentiments have increased. Behind Turkey’s transformation has been not only the impressive AKP political machine but also a shadowy Islamist sect led by the mysterious hocaefendi (master lord) Fethullah Gülen; the sect often bills itself as a proponent of tolerance and dialogue but works toward purposes quite the opposite. Today, Gülen and his backers (Fethullahcılar, Fethullahists) not only seek to influence government but also to become the government.

    In 1998, Fethullah Gülen left Turkey for the United States, reportedly to receive medical treatment for diabetes. Since his voluntary exile, Gülen has resided on a large, rural estate in eastern Pennsylvania, together with about 100 followers, who guard him and tend to his needs. It is from his U.S. base that Gülen has built his fame and his transnational empire.

    Today, Turkey has over 85,000 active mosques, one for every 350 citizens-compared to one hospital for every 60,000 citizens-the highest number per capita in the world and, with 90,000 imams, more imams than doctors or teachers. It has thousands of madrasa-like Imam-Hatip schools and about four thousand more official state-run Qur’an courses, not counting the unofficial Qur’an schools, which may expand the total number tenfold. Spending by the governmental Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet Işleri Başkanlığı) has grown five fold, from 553 trillion Turkish lira in 2002 (approximately US$325 million) to 2.7 quadrillion lira during the first four-and-a-half years of the AKP government; it has a larger budget than eight other ministries combined.[1] The Friday prayer attendance rate in Turkey’s mosques exceeds that of Iran’s, and religion classes teaching Sunni Islam are compulsory in public schools despite rulings against the practice by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) and the Turkish high court (Danıştay).[2] Both Prime Minister Erdoğan and the Diyanet head Ali Bardakoğlu criticized the rulings for failing to consult Islamic scholars.

    Gülen now helps set the political agenda in Turkey using his followers in the AKP as well as the movement’s vast media empire, financial institutions and banks, business organizations, an international network of thousands of schools, universities, student residences (ışıkevis), and many associations and foundations. He is a financial heavyweight, controlling an unregulated and opaque budget estimated at $25 billion.[3] It is not clear whether the Fethullahist cemaat (community) supports the AKP or is the ruling force behind AKP. Either way, however, the effect is the same.

    Gülen’s Background

    Born in Erzurum, Turkey, in 1942, Fethullah Gülen is an imam who considers himself a prophet.[4] An enigmatic figure, many in the West applaud him as a reformist and advocate for tolerance,[5] a catalyst of “moderate Islam” for Turkey and beyond. He is praised in the West, especially in the United States, as an intellectual, scholar, and educator[6] even though his formal education is limited to five years of elementary school. After receiving an imam-preacher certificate, he served as an imam, first in Erdirne and later in Izmir. In 1971, the Turkish security service arrested him for clandestine religious activities, such as running illegal summer camps to indoctrinate youths, and was, from that time on, occasionally harassed by the staunchly secular military.[7] In 1981, he formally retired from his post as a local preacher.

    To build an image as a proponent of interfaith dialogue, Gülen met Pope John Paul II, other Christian clergy, and Jewish rabbis[8] and emphasizes the commonalities unifying Abrahamic religions. He presents himself and his movement as the modern-day version of tolerant, liberal Anatolian Sufism and has used the literature of great Sufi thinkers such as Jalal ad-Din Rumi and Yunus Emre, pretending to share their moderate teachings.[9] Quotes from their teachings adorn Fethullah’s Gülen’s propaganda material. The movement, its proxy organizations, and universities-including Georgetown, to which it donates money-hold conferences in the United States and Europe to discuss Gülen. In October 2007, the British House of Lords feted Gülen with a conference in his honor.
    Gülen was a student and follower of Sheikh Sa’id-i Kurdi (1878-1960), also known as Sa’id-i Nursi, the founder of the Islamist Nur (light) movement.[10] After Turkey’s war of independence, Kurdi demanded, in an address to the new parliament, that the new republic be based on Islamic principles. He turned against Atatürk and his reforms and against the new modern, secular, Western republic.

    In 1998, Gülen departed for the United States, reportedly to receive medical treatment for diabetes. However, his absence also enabled Gülen to escape questioning on his indictment in 2000 for allegedly promoting insurrection in Turkey in a series of secretly-recorded sermons. Since his voluntary exile, Gülen has resided on a large, rural estate in eastern Pennsylvania, together with about 100 followers, who guard him and tend to his needs. These servants are educated men who wear suits and ties and do not look like traditional Islamists in cloaks and turbans. They follow their hocaefendi’s orders and even refrain from marrying until age fifty per his instructions. When they do marry, their spouses are expected to dress in the Islamic manner, as dictated by Gülen himself.[11] It is from his U.S. base that Gülen has built his fame and his transnational empire.

    Gülen’s Education Network

    The core of Gülen’s network is his educational institutions. His school network is impressive. Nurettin Veren, Gülen’s right-hand man for thirty-five years, estimated that some 75 percent of Turkey’s two million preparatory school students are enrolled in Gülen institutions.[12] He controls thousands of top-tier secondary schools, colleges, and student dormitories throughout Turkey, as well as private universities, the largest being Fatih University in Istanbul. Outside Turkey, his movement runs hundreds of secondary schools and dozens of universities in 110 countries worldwide. Gülen’s aim is not altruistic: His followers target youth in the eighth through twelfth grades, mentor and indoctrinate them in the ışıkevi, educate them in the Fethullah schools, and prepare them for future careers in legal, political, and educational professions in order to create the ruling classes of the future Islamist, Turkish state. Taking their orders from Fethullah Gülen, wealthy followers continue to open schools and ışıkevi in what Sabah columnist Emre Aköz called “the education jihad.”[13]

    The overt network of schools is only one part of a larger strategy. In a 2006 interview, Veren said, “These schools are like shop windows. Recruitment and Islamization activities are carried out through night classes … Children whom we educated in Turkey are now in the highest positions. There are governors, judges, military officers. There are ministers in the government. They consult Gülen before doing anything.”[14]

    The AKP’s controversial education policies, coupled with the Islamist indoctrination in Fethullahist schools, have accelerated the Islamization of Turkish society. During AKP’s first term in government, the Erdoğan government has changed textbooks, emphasized religion courses, and transferred thousands of certified imams from their positions in the Directorate of Religious Affairs to positions as teachers and administrators in Turkey’s public schools.[15] Abdullah Gül, Turkey’s first Islamist president and a Gülen sympathizer, appointed a Gülen-affiliated professor, Yusuf Ziya Özcan, to head Turkey’s Council of Higher Education (Yükseköğretim Kurulu, YÖK). He has also used his presidential prerogative to appoint Gülen sympathizers to university presidencies.

    Beyond Turkey, the Fethullahist schools also serve as fertile recruiting grounds. In his Institut d’Etudes Politiques doctoral thesis on Gülen schools in Central Asia, Bayram Balcı, a French scholar of Turkish origin, wrote, “Fethullah’s aim is the Islamization of Turkish nationality and the Turcification of Islam in foreign countries. Dozens of Fethullah’s ‘Turkish schools’ abroad-most of which are for boys-are used to covertly ‘convert,’ not so much ‘in school,’ but through direct proselytism ‘outside school.’” Balcı explained, “He wants to revive the link between state, religion, and society.”[16] The schools of Gülen’s Nur movement in Central Asia have worked to reestablish Islam in a region largely secularized by decades of Soviet control. Balcı explained, “The aim of the cemaat is to educate and influence future national elites, who will speak English and Turkish and who will one day prove their good intentions towards Fethullahists and towards Turkey.” Several countries in the region have taken steps against Gülen’s educational institutions because of such suspicions. Uzbekistan has banned the schools for encouraging Islamic law,[17] and the Russian government, weary of the movement’s activities in majority Muslim regions of the federation, has banned not only the Gülen schools but all activities of the entire Nur sect in the country.[18]

    Neither Uzbekistan nor Russia are known for their pluralism, but suspicion about Gülen indoctrination has spread even to more permissive societies such as that of the Netherlands. In 2008, members of the Netherland’s Christian Democrat, Labor, and Conservative parties agreed to cut several million euros in government funding for organizations affiliated with “the Turkish imam Fethullah Gülen” and to thoroughly investigate the activities of the Gülen group after Erik Jan Zürcher, director of the Amsterdam-based International Institute for Social History, and five former Gülen followers who had worked in Gülen’s ışıkevi told Dutch television that the Gülen community was moving step-by-step to topple the secular order.[19] While the organizations in question denied any ties to the Gülen movement, Zürcher said that taqiya, religiously-sanctioned dissimulation, was typical in the movement’s interactions with the West. An unnamed former Gülen follower who also once worked in Gülen schools and ışıkevi reported that Fethullahists called the Dutch “filthy, blasphemous infidels” and that they said “the best Dutchman is one who has converted to Islam. All the Dutch must be made Muslims.”[20] Indeed, of the thousands of Fethullahist schools in more than one hundred countries that allegedly teach moderation, none are located in countries such as Saudi Arabia or Iran that exist under domineering strains of official Islam, and most appear instead geared to radicalize students in secular Muslim and non-Muslim societies.

    Eviscerating Checks and Balances

    Fethullahists have also made inroads into Turkey’s 200,000-strong police force. Their infiltration has had a compounding effect, as Fethullahist officials have purged officials more loyal to the republic than the hocaefendi. According to Veren, “There are imam security directors; imams wearing police uniforms. Many police commissioners get their orders from imams.”[21] Adil Serdar Saçan, former director of the organized crimes unit within the Istanbul Directorate of Security, confirmed these statements in reports he prepared on the Fethullahist organization within the security apparatus. In a 2006 interview, he said,
    Fethullahists began organizing inside the security apparatus in the 1970s. In police academies, students were being taken to ışıkevi by class commissioners. One of those commissioners is now the director of intelligence at the Turkish Directorate of Security. During my time at the [police] academy, those in the directorate who did not have ties to the [Gülen] organization were all pensioned off or fired in 2002 when the AKP came to power. … I was at the top of my class when I graduated from the police academy, and throughout the twenty-four years of my career, I maintained and was honored for my stellar record. After 2002, the AKP blocked my promotions. They promoted only those officers whose files were tainted with allegations that they were engaged in reactionary Islamist activities. … Belonging to a certain cemaat has become a prerequisite for advancement in the force. At present, over 80 percent of the officers at supervisory level in the general security organization are members of the [Gülen] cemaat.[22]
    Such statements, however, may have consequences.[23] In October 2008, Turkish police arrested Saçan on suspicion of involvement in the so-called Ergenekon plot to overthrow the Turkish state.[24] Most Turkish analysts believe that the Ergenekon conspiracy, short of any evidence of unconstitutional activities, is more a mechanism by which the Turkish government can harass critics.[25]
    Writer and journalist Merdan Yanardağ provided statistics to illuminate the Islamist penetration of the Ankara Directorate of Security. He explained,
    Prior to Ramadan, personnel at the Directorate of Security in Ankara were asked whether they would be fasting during Ramadan, in order to establish the number of meals that would be needed during that period. Of the 4,200 employees, only seventeen indicated that they would not be fasting. Considering that some of the seventeen might have been sick or taking medications, the numbers speak for themselves. [26]

    Wiretapping scandals in spring 2008 also highlighted Gülenist penetration of the security service’s most important units. After the Turkish Security Directorate obtained a blanket court permit in April 2007 to monitor and record all the communications in Turkey including mobile and land-line telephones, SMS text messaging, e-mail, fax, and Internet communications,[27] Turks have grown uneasy about having telephone conversations fearing intrusion into their privacy. Recent leaks to pro-AKP media of recordings of military personnel meetings, lectures, top secret military documents, strategic antiterrorism plans, private medical files of commanders, and contents of personal conversations between state prosecutors have shocked the nation as has the appearance on the Internet video site YouTube of some of those recordings.

    The alleged network of Fethullah followers in the security system has an impact on domestic affairs as they use restricted technology or privileged information to further their political agenda. In February 2008, for example, several websites posted the voice recording of a secret speech delivered by Brig. Gen. Münir Erten announcing the timing of an upcoming Turkish military operation into Iraqi Kurdistan, details of a private discussion with the chief of the General Staff, and private information concerning Gen. Ergin Saygun’s health.[28] The following month, several websites including YouTube posted a secretly recorded conversation between prosecutor Salim Demirci and a colleague regarding Erdoğan and Efkan Ala, then governor of Diyarbakir and subsequently a counselor of Erdoğan’s office. Erdoğan responded by ordering a criminal investigation against Demirci.[29] In June 2008, the Islamist Vakit published Saygun’s entire medical file, disclosing information about his diabetes as well as the treatments and medications he had received in the Gülhane military hospital.[30] Others whose tapped conversations appeared on Islamist websites and in Gülen’s newspaper network included Erdoğan Teziç, the former head of Turkey’s Higher Education Council, and prominent members of the center-left opposition Republican People’s Party (Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, CHP). Many Turkish journalists believe that Fethullahist-dominated police tap their communications, and according to reports, the head of the wiretapping unit, who was appointed by Erdoğan in August 2005, is a Fethullah follower.[31] Islamist newspapers including Vakit, Yeni Şafak, Zaman, and the pro-AKP Taraf published leaks from private conversations held inside government offices and military headquarters. The Islamist, pro-AKP media has reported alleged confidential evidence relating to the police investigation of the so-called Ergenekon plot that posits a secularist cabal of military officers, journalists, and professors sought to overthrow the AKP government.[32] The net effect of such leaks is to tar the reputations of or intimidate AKP’s political opponents and the Turkish military.
    Islamization within police ranks also contributes to police brutality against anti-AKP demonstrators. On May 1, 2008, the police used gas bombs, pepper gas, water cannons, and clubs against workers who wanted to celebrate May Day peacefully in Istanbul’s Taksim Square, the traditional site of demonstrations in Turkey’s largest city; scores were injured.[33] Labor unions and opposition parties condemned the police brutality and accused Erdoğan of using police to silence opposition voices.[34] Police also suppressed labor protests in Tuzla (Istanbul) shipyards.[35] Similarly, police have harassed individual citizens after they criticized Erdoğan’s policies. Erdoğan’s own security guards abducted a 46-year-old man from Antalya for speaking out in public against his social security policies, taking the man to a deserted location where the guards beat and threatened him. The victim alleged that his attackers said they could easily plant guns or drugs on him and kill him.[36]

    While Turkey’s military is guarantor of the constitution, Veren alleged that Fethullahists had also entrenched themselves within the military, police, and other professions:
    The Fethullahist military officers were once our students, who we financially supported, educated, and assisted. When these grateful children graduated and reached influential positions, they put themselves and their positions at the service of Fethullah Gülen … [Gülen] directs and instructs, and, through them, maintains power within the state … When Gülen’s students graduate from the police or military academies-as do the new doctors and lawyers-they present their first salaries to Fethullah Gülen as a gesture of their gratitude. Newly graduated officers even bring him the swords that they receive during the graduation ceremony.[37]

    According to Veren, Gülen has argued that the military expels no more than one in forty Islamist officers; the rest remain in undercover cells. While such allegations may seem the stuff of conspiracy theory, recent leaks to pro-AKP media suggest a number of Islamist sources within the military ranks, creating speculation that followers of Gülen now populate the senior infrastructure of the Turkish General Staff. Such speculation gained additional credence after the August 2008 Supreme Military Council (Yüksek Askeri Şura, YAŞ), which, for the first time, declined to expel suspected Islamists from military ranks.

    The AKP government has also aided the Gülen movement with its reorientation of the judiciary. Over the first five years of his rule, Erdoğan replaced thousands of judges and prosecutors with AKP appointees. Now that the president is Islamist, it is unlikely that he would veto the appointment of Islamists to the bench, as did his predecessor Ahmet Necdet Sezer. Indeed, it now appears that the government intends to appoint thousands more to judicial positions.[38] The AKP has also enacted a law that would require applicants for judgeships to first interview with AKP bureaucrats in order better to gauge and adjudicate applicants’ adherence to Islam. The results of the AKP’s targeting of the judicial system are already apparent as anti-secular, pro-AKP officials have been at the forefront of some controversial trials, such as the case against Van University president Yücel Aşkın,[39] the Şemdinli investigation in which the prosecutor tried to implicate Gen. Yaşar Büyükanıt before he became chief of the General Staff, and, most recently, the Ergenekon probe.

    Indeed, it is such overtly political and vindictive prosecutions that have led some former Gülen sympathizers, such as University of Utah political scientist Hakan Yavuz, to a change of heart. In one interview, Yavuz told odatv.com that four important legal cases had changed his thinking: the case against Aşkın; the Semdinli case; the Atabeyler operation, uncovered in 2005, involving an organized crime group with alleged plans to assassinate Prime Minister Erdoğan;[40] and the Ergenekon probe. Yavuz explained, “The cemaat has attempted to steer all four cases. Look at the slanderous reports in archives of the cemaat’s newspapers, how they defamed Yucel Aşkın. And now it’s Ergenekon. Keeping [prominent] personalities in jail for over a year without indictment is inexplicable.” Yavuz also suggested Gülen’s cemaat spoke differently to its members than to outsiders and that it was pursuing a political agenda that conflicted with the founding philosophy of the modern Turkish republic. He accused Fethullahists of “co-optation” and said that they were recruiting people and paying them money-without any formal receipts or records-to write and speak favorably about the movement while criticizing the secular Turkish state.[41]

    The Fifth Estate

    If the police, military, and courts might normally protect rule-of-law from within official Turkish government structures, there might still be an external check to abuse of power in the Turkish media. The Turkish media has traditionally been relentless in its reporting of abuses of power and corruption. Soon after assuming office, however, Erdoğan proved intolerant of the concept of a free press. The AKP government has systematically sought to create a media monopoly to speak with one voice and on behalf of the government. Erdoğan lashes out at media organs that he does not control. In his first term, Erdoğan brought more than a hundred lawsuits against sixty-three journalists in sixteen publications, against many writers, as well as the leaders and members of parliament of all opposition parties. The number of lawsuits may be far greater. In 2008, Erdoğan declined to answer a parliamentary inquiry by a Democratic Left Party deputy demanding information on how many lawsuits Erdoğan had initiated against journalists-claiming that such information was in the realm of his private life.”[42] Most of Erdoğan’s lawsuits against journalists involve criticism that any other democracy would consider legitimate. In 2005, for example, he sued Cumhuriyet cartoonist Musa Kart for depicting him as a cat entangled in a ball of string. Last year, he sued the LeMan weekly humor magazine for ridiculing him in its January 30, 2008 cover.[43]

    Erdoğan lost some of his lawsuits, and courts threw out others, but the effect has nonetheless been chilling. Journalists know that not only does the prime minister seek to make them financially liable for any criticism, but that the AKP might even seek to assume control of their publications. During AKP’s 6-year rule, the government has seized control of several media outlets and subsequently sold them to pro-AKP holdings affiliated with the Gülen community. In April 2007, for example, the governmental Saving Deposit Insurance Fund (Tasarruf Mevduatı Sigorta Fonu, TMSF) seized Sabah-ATV, Turkey’s second largest media group in a predawn raid. The TMSF, staffed by Erdoğan appointees, then sold the group to Çalık Holding, the CEO of which is Erdoğan’s son-in-law. Çalık financed the purchase with public funds taken as loans from two state-owned banks and by partnering with a newly-founded, Qatar-based media company that bought 25 percent of Sabah shares. It was Abdullah Gül who introduced Ahmet Çalık to Qatari Emir Hamad bin Khalifa during his January 2008 visit in Syria; Çalık also accompanied Gül in February and Erdoğan in April when they visited Qatar. Media reports indicated that other consortiums that had initially shown interest in purchasing Sabah-ATV with their own money pulled out of the tender shortly before the bid after Erdoğan contacted them, leaving Çalik the sole bidder.[44] Sabah has since become a strong advocate of the AKP government. In September 2008, Erdoğan demanded all party members and aides boycott newspapers owned by the Doğan Media Group after it reported on laundering of money to Islamist charities.[45]

    Excluding the Islamist television and radio stations, newspapers such as Zaman, Sabah, Yeni Şafak, Türkiye, Star, Bugün, Vakit, and Taraf all have AKP and/or Gülen-affiliated ownership. By circulation, such papers represent at least 40 percent of all newspaper sales in Turkey.[46]

    What Are Gülen’s Intentions?

    Conglomerates have long had a dominant position in Turkish society. Secular businessmen such as Aydın Doğan and Mehmet Emin Karamehmet have interests not only in industry but also in media, the banking sector, and even education. Never before, though, has a single individual started a movement that seeks to transform Turkish society so fundamentally. Gülen now wields a vocal partisan media; a vast network of loyal bureaucrats; partisan universities and academia; partisan prosecutors and judges; partisan security and intelligence agencies; partisan capitalists, business associations, NGOs, and labor unions; and partisan teachers, doctors, and hospitals. What makes Gülen so dangerous? Gülen’s own teaching and sermons provide the best answers.

    In 1999, Turkish television aired footage of Gülen delivering sermons to a crowd of followers in which he revealed his aspirations for an Islamist Turkey ruled by Shari‘a (Islamic law) as well as the methods that should be used to attain that goal. In the sermons, he said:
    You must move in the arteries of the system without anyone noticing your existence until you reach all the power centers … until the conditions are ripe, they [the followers] must continue like this. If they do something prematurely, the world will crush our heads, and Muslims will suffer everywhere, like in the tragedies in Algeria, like in 1982 [in] Syria … like in the yearly disasters and tragedies in Egypt. The time is not yet right. You must wait for the time when you are complete and conditions are ripe, until we can shoulder the entire world and carry it … You must wait until such time as you have gotten all the state power, until you have brought to your side all the power of the constitutional institutions in Turkey … Until that time, any step taken would be too early-like breaking an egg without waiting the full forty days for it to hatch. It would be like killing the chick inside. The work to be done is [in] confronting the world. Now, I have expressed my feelings and thoughts to you all-in confidence … trusting your loyalty and secrecy. I know that when you leave here-[just] as you discard your empty juice boxes, you must discard the thoughts and the feelings that I expressed here.

    He continued,
    When everything was closed and all doors were locked, our houses of isik [light] assumed a mission greater than that of older times. In the past, some of the duties of these houses were carried out by madrasas [Islamic schools], some by schools, some by tekkes [Islamist lodges] … These isik homes had to be the schools, had to be madrasas, [had to be] tekkes all at the same time. The permission did not come from the state, or the state’s laws, or the people who govern us. The permission was given by God … who wanted His name learned and talked about, studied, and discussed in those houses, as it used to be in the mosques.[47]

    In another sermon, Gülen said,
    Now it is a painful spring that we live in. A nation is being born again. A nation of millions [is] being born-one that will live for long centuries, God willing … It is being born with its own culture, its own civilization. If giving birth to one person is so painful, the birth of millions cannot be pain-free. Naturally we will suffer pain. It won’t be easy for a nation that has accepted atheism, has accepted materialism, a nation accustomed to running away from itself, to come back riding on its horse. It will not be easy, but it is worth all our suffering and the sacrifices.[48]
    And, in yet another sermon, he declared,
    The philosophy of our service is that we open a house somewhere and, with the patience of a spider, we lay our web to wait for people to get caught in the web; and we teach those who do. We don’t lay the web to eat or consume them but to show them the way to their resurrection, to blow life into their dead bodies and souls, to give them a life.[49]
    Many Gülen supporters and members of the Islamist media affiliated with the cemaat suggested the sermons were somehow forged[50] but the denials are unconvincing given the video footage and reports by Gülen movement defectors.

    U.S. Government Support for Gülen?

    Many Turkish analysts believe that, prior to Erdoğan’s election, Gülen and his supporters in the U.S. government helped obtain an invitation to the White House for him at a time when Erdoğan was banned from politics in Turkey due to his Islamist activities-an event viewed as a U.S. endorsement ahead of the 2002 Turkish elections. That the U.S. government and, specifically, the Central Intelligence Agency support the Gülen movement is conventional wisdom among Turkey’s secular elite even though no hard evidence exists to support such allegations.

    When Turkish secularists are asked to defend the view that Gülen enjoys U.S. support, they often point to his almost 20-year residence in eastern Pennsylvania. After the Supreme Court of Appeals in Turkey (Yargıtay) confirmed on June 24, 2008, a lower court’s ruling to acquit Gülen on charges that he organized an illegal terrorist organization to overthrow the secular government in Turkey, Gülen won another legal battle, this time in the United States. A federal court reversed U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service decisions that would have denied Gülen’s application for permanent residency in the United States on the basis that Gülen did not fit the criteria as someone with “extraordinary ability in the field of education.” The Department of Homeland Security characterized Gülen as neither an expert in the field of education nor an educator but rather as “the leader of a large and influential religious and political movement with immense commercial holdings.”[51]
    While the court ruling that allowed Gülen to remain in the United States may provide fodder for Turkish analysts who suggest U.S. support for Gülen, the process is actually more revealing. Indeed, the U.S. government noted that much of the acclaim Gülen touts is sponsored or financed by his own movement. Gülen attached twenty-nine letters of reference to his June 18, 2008 motion, mostly from theologians or Turkish political figures close to or affiliated with his organization. John Esposito, founding director of the Saudi-financed Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, who, after receiving donations from the Gülen movement sponsored a conference in his honor, also supplied a reference. Two former CIA officials, George Fidas and Graham Fuller, and former U.S. ambassador to Turkey Morton Abramowitz also supplied references.

    The letters may have worked. On July 16, 2008, U.S. district judge Stewart Dalzell issued a memorandum and order granting Gülen’s motion for partial summary judgment and ordering the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service to approve his petition for alien worker status as an alien of extraordinary ability by August 1, 2008. The court found that the immigration examiner improperly concluded that the field of education was the only statutory category in which Gülen’s accomplishments could fit and that Gülen’s accomplishments in such fields as theology, political science, and Islamic studies should also be considered. The court further determined that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service Administrative Appeals Office erred in concluding that Gülen’s work was not “scholarly” by applying an unduly narrow definition of the term. Finally, with regard to the statutory requirement that the applicant show that his or her entry into the United States would substantially benefit the United States, the court found that Gülen had met the requirement.[52]

    Regardless of the legal rationale behind his current stay, the U.S. decision to grant Gülen residency will enable his movement to continue to imply Washington’s endorsement as the AKP and its Fethullahist supporters seek to push Turkey further away from the secularism upon which it was built.

    Conclusions

    Gülen enjoys the support of many friends, ideological fellow-travelers, and co-opted journalists and academics. Too often, concern over Gülen’s activities is dismissed in the Turkish, U.S., and European media as mere paranoia. When Turkey’s chief prosecutor indicted the AKP for attempting to undermine the secular constitution, the pro-Islamist media in Turkey along with Western diplomats and journalists dismissed the case as an “undemocratic judicial coup.”[53] Yet at the same time, many of the same outlets and officials have hailed the Ergenekon indictment, assuming a dichotomy between Islamism and democracy on one hand, and secularism and fascism on the other.[54] The repeated branding in Islamist outlets of Turkey’s Islamists as “reformist democrats” and of modern, secular Turks as “fundamentalists” has to be one of the most offensive but sadly effective lies in modern politics.
    Indeed, Turkey has never seen a single incident of attacks on pious Muslims for fasting during Ramadan, whereas in recent years there have been many incidents of attacks on less-observant Turks for drinking alcohol or not fasting.[55] While women who cover their heads in the Islamic manner can move freely in any area of the country, uncovered women are increasingly unwelcome in certain regions and are often attacked.[56]

    Contrary to the impression prevalent in the West-that the conflict is between religious Muslims and “anti-religion, secular Kemalists”-the fact remains that the majority of Turks, secular included, are traditional and observant Muslims many of whom define themselves primarily as “Muslims first.”[57] While the Turkish constitution recognizes all Turkish citizens as “Turks,” the dominant sentiment in the country has always been that in order to be considered a Turk, one must be Muslim. The complete absence of any non-Muslim governor, ambassador, or military or police officer attests to the prevalence of Islam’s dominance in the Turkish establishment. Therefore, it appears Gülen is not fighting for more individual freedoms but to free Islam from the confines of the mosque and the private domain of individuals and to bring it to the public arena, to govern every aspect of life in the country.[58] AKP leaders, including Gül and Erdoğan, have repeatedly expressed their opposition to the “imprisonment of Islam in the mosque,” demanding that it be present everywhere as a lifestyle. Most Turks vividly remember statements by AKP leaders not long ago rejecting the definition of secularism as “separation of mosque and state.” Gül has slammed “secularism” on many occasions, including during a November 27, 1995 interview with The Guardian. What Turkey’s Islamists really want is to remove the founding principles of the Turkish Republic. So long as U.S. and Western officials fail to recognize that Gülen’s rhetoric of tolerance is only skin-deep, they may be setting the stage for a dialogue, albeit not of religious tolerance, but rather to find an answer to the question, “Who lost Turkey?”

    Rachel Sharon-Krespin is the director of the Turkish Media Project at the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), Washington D.C.

    [1] Can Dündar, Milliyet (Istanbul), June 21, 2007; Reha Muhtar, Vatan (Istanbul), June 22, 2007.
    [2] Milliyet, Mar. 10, 2008; Hürriyet (Istanbul), Mar. 10, 2008.
    [3] Helen Rose Ebaugh and Dogan Koc, “Funding Gülen-Inspired Good Works: Demonstrating and Generating Commitment to the Movement,” fgulen.com, Oct. 27, 2007.
    [4] Merdan Yanardağ, Fethullah Gülen Hareketinin Perde Arkasi, Turkiye Nasil Kusatildi? (Istanbul: yah Beyaz Yayın, 2006), based on interviews with Nurettin Veren on Kanaltürk television, June 26, July 3, 2006.
    [5] “Fethullah Gülen Is an Islamic Scholar and Peace Activist,” International Conference on Fethullah Gülen, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, Nov. 2007; J. J. Rogers, “Giants of Light: Fethullah Gülen and Meister Eckhart in Dialogue,” The University of Texas, San Antonio, Tex., Nov. 3, 2007.
    [6] See for example, Rogers, “Giants of Light”; USA Today, July 18, 2008.
    [7] Bülent Aras, “Turkish Islam’s Moderate Face,” Middle East Quarterly, Sept. 1998, pp. 23-9.
    [8] Anadolu Ajansı (Ankara), Feb. 10, 1998.
    [9] Booklets on Anatolian Sufism with citations from Mevlana Celleddin Rumi distributed at the “Muslim World in Transition: Contributions of the Gulen Movement” conference, London, Oct. 25 – 27, 2007.
    [10] Aland Mizell, “Clash of Civilizations versus Interfaith Dialogue: The Theories of Huntington and Gulen,” KurdishMedia.com, Dec. 31, 2007; idem, “Are Islam and Kemalism Compatible? How Two Systems Have Impacted the Kurdish Question?” Iraq Updates, Nov. 28, 2007.
    [11] Interview with Nurettin Veren, Kanaltürk television, June 26, 2006.
    [12] Ibid.
    [13] Sabah (Istanbul), Dec. 30, 2004.
    [14] Veren interview, Kanaltürk, June 26, 2006.
    [15] Cumhuriyet (Istanbul), Dec. 23, 2007.
    [16] Bayram Balcı, “Central Asia: Fethullah Gulen’s Missionary Schools,” Oct. 2001.
    [17] Interview with Merdan Yanardağ, Gerçek Gündem (Istanbul), Nov. 20, 2006.
    [18] Hürriyet, Apr. 11, 2008.
    [19] Erik-Jan Zürcher, “Kamermeerderheid Eist Onderzoek Naar Turkse Beweging,” NOVA documentary, July 4, 2008.
    [20] Cumhuriyet, July 9, 2008; Netherlands Information Services, July 11, 2008.
    [21] Yanardağ, Fethullah Gülen Hareketinin Perde Arkasi, Turkiye Nasil Kusatildi?
    [22] Adil Serdar Saçan, interview, Kanaltürk, July 3, 2006.
    [23] Ibid.
    [24] Samanyolu television, Oct. 13, 2008.
    [25] See, for example, Michael Rubin, “Erdogan, Ergenekon, and the Struggle for Turkey,” Mideast Monitor, Aug. 2008.
    [26] Yanardağ interview, Gerçek Gündem, Nov. 20, 2006.
    [27] Vatan, June 2, 2008; Hürriyet, June 2, 2008.
    [28] “SOK! Tuggeneral Munir Erten den SOK aciklamalar!” accessed Oct. 27, 2008.
    [29] “Sok Video! Cumhuriyet Savcisi Salim Demirci,” accessed Oct. 27, 2008.
    [30] Vakit (Istanbul), June 14, 2008.
    [31] Vatan, June 2, 2008; Hürriyet, June 2, 2008.
    [32] BBC News, Feb. 4, 2008; Frank Hyland, “Investigation of Turkey’s ‘Deep State’ Ergenekon Plot Spreads to Military,” Global Terrorism Analysis, Jamestown Foundation, July 16, 2008.
    [33] Reuters, May 1, 2008; Sendika.org, Labornet Turkey, May 1, 2008; Vatan, May 1, 2, 2008; Milliyet, May 1, 2, 2008; Hürriyet, May 1, 2, 2008
    [34] Vatan, May 2, 2008; Milliyet, May 2, 2008; Hürriyet, May 2, 8, 2008.
    [35] Hürriyet, Feb. 28, 2008.
    [36] Milliyet, May 14, 2008.
    [37] Yanardağ, Fethullah Gülen Hareketinin Perde Arkasi, Turkiye Nasil Kusatildi?
    [38] “Turkish Judiciary at War with AKP Government to Defend Its Independence,” MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 1520, Mar. 27, 2007.
    [39] “The AKP Government’s Attempt to Move Turkey from Secularism to Islamism (Part I): The Clash with Turkey’s Universities,” MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 1014, Nov. 1, 2005; “Professor from Van University in Turkey Commits Suicide after Five Months in Jail without Trial,” MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 1025, Nov. 18, 2005.
    [40] Zaman (Istanbul), Apr. 18, 2008.
    [41] Odatv.com, May 30, 2008; Hürriyet, June 13, 2008; Akşam (Istanbul), June 16, 2008.
    [42] Radikal (Istanbul), Apr. 7, 2008.
    [43] Hürriyet, Oct. 21, 2008.
    [44] Hürriyet, May 14, 2008.
    [45] Hürriyet, Sept. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 2008.
    [46] Milliyet, July 14, 2008; Cumhuriyet, July 15, 2008
    [47] Turkish channel ATV, June 18, 1999.
    [48] Ibid.
    [49] Ibid.; “The Upcoming Elections in Turkey (2): The AKP’s Political Power Base,” MEMRI Inquiry and Analysis No. 375, July 19, 2007.
    [50] Sabah, Jan. 2, 3, 2005.
    [51] “Fethullah Gulen v. Michael Chertoff, Secretary, U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security, et al,” Case 2:07-cv-02148-SD, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
    [52] Ibid.
    [53] Turkish Daily News (Ankara), Mar. 16, 2008; Vakit, June 7, 9, 2008; Yeni Şafak (Istanbul), June 9, 2008.
    [54] Mustafa Akyol, “The Threat Is Secular Fundamentalism,” International Herald Tribune, May 4, 2007; “Islam Will Modernize-If Secular Fundamentalists Allow,” Turkish Daily News, May 15, 2007; “Mr. Logoglu Is Wrong, Considerably Wrong about Turkey,” Turkish Daily News, May 24, 2007.
    [55] Vatan, Aug. 21, 2008; Turkish Daily News, Sept. 23, 2008.
    [56] Hürriyet, Feb. 14, 2008; Milliyet, Feb. 14, 2008; Vatan, Feb. 14, 2008, Cumhuriyet, Feb. 14, 2008.
    [57] Yeni Şafak, July 7, 2006.
    [58] “Turkish PM Erdogan in Speech during Term as Istanbul Mayor Attacks Turkey’s Constitution, Describing It as ‘A Huge Lie’: ‘Sovereignty Belongs Unconditionally and Always To Allah’; ‘One Cannot Be a Muslim and Secular,’” MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 1596, May 23, 2007.

  • ASURE (NOAH’S PUDDING) -AND-  FETULLAH GULEN’S DIALOG FOUNDATIONS

    ASURE (NOAH’S PUDDING) -AND- FETULLAH GULEN’S DIALOG FOUNDATIONS

    Pudding for peace

    Noah’s Pudding

    Photograph by: Pierre Obendrauf, The Gazette

    If a total stranger offers you a cup of pudding in the next few weeks, don’t be surprised.

    Members of the local Turkish community are distributing 5,000 servings of Noah’s pudding, a traditional treat they trace all the way back to the biblical story of Noah’s ark.

    This is more than a random act of dessert.

    Organizers hope the offerings will promote peace and heal rifts between different faiths and cultures.

    A tall order for a cup of pudding, but then, this is no ordinary dessert.

    Noah’s pudding is one of the world’s oldest recipes.

    According to Turkish tradition, it originated when Noah’s ark landed on Mount Ararat after the great flood recounted in the Book of Genesis.

    The story goes that food was running short on the ark and Noah told the survivors to contribute whatever they had left to celebrate their safe arrival. The result was a sweet porridge of wheat, chickpeas, dried beans, apricots, raisins, orange peel and sugar.

    In Turkey, people offer the pudding to friends, neighbours and the poor during Muharrem, the first month of the Islamic calendar.

    In recent years, Turkish Muslim organizations across North America have transplanted the tradition as a way to reach out to the wider community.

    “Our aim is to get people from different faiths, bring them together on a common platform of love and tolerance and build understanding,” said Fehmi Kala, executive director of the Dialog Foundation, a non-profit organization founded three years ago (By Fetullah Gulen) to build bridges between different religious and cultural groups.

    Montreal’s Turkish community numbers 10,345, according to the 2006 census. Kala said most live in Montreal North, St. Michel and St. Laurent.

    Nezihe Tekin, 27, was one of a dozen women preparing thousands of portions of pudding last week in the Communauté

    Islamique Turque du Québec, a community centre in the St. Michel district.

    Turkish cuisine is known for its desserts, said Tekin, as she stirred a huge stockpot.

    “We have a saying, ‘let’s eat sweets and speak sweetly,’ ” she said.

    The most famous, of course, is Turkish delight, a confection served to guests with Turkish coffee.

    Rice pudding is a popular summer dessert, while baklava is mostly eaten during the winter, Tekin said.

    Noah’s pudding is traditionally cooked on the 10th day of Muharrem to commemorate Noah’s landing, but it is also eaten at other times of year in Turkey.

    The pudding is surprisingly delicious, considering its eclectic ingredients, said Tekin.

    It is an apt symbol of diversity, she said. Just as each of the ingredients contributes its own flavour, different faiths and cultures enrich society.

    “When you put it all together, you can make something nice, no matter what colour or religion.”

    Kala said Turkey has been a cultural crossroads since antiquity because of its strategic location as a land bridge between Europe and Asia and its proximity to Africa.

    He grew up in Antioch, formerly a great city of the ancient world and a cradle of Christianity.

    “My friends were Armenian, Kurdish, Shiite, Sunni, Christian and Jewish,” said Kala, 30, who was a history teacher until immigrating to Canada six years ago. “We all got along well.”

    When Tekin came to Montreal eight years ago as a 19-year-old newlywed, she didn’t know anyone in the Turkish community, so she cooked Noah’s pudding for her Italian landlord in the St. Michel district.

    “He liked it and my husband said, ‘Cook it for all the neighbours.’”

    The pudding has endless variations, some calling for as many as 40 ingredients.

    Some versions use barley instead of wheat, or a mixture of wheat and rice. Milk is optional. Many recipes call for rose water or orange flower water.

    It is garnished with nuts, pomegranate seeds and sometimes cinnamon.

    Variations exist throughout the Mediterranean world. Armenians serve a similar pudding at Christmas and Sephardic Jews have a tradition of preparing the pudding at Tu Bishvat, a holiday associated with the planting of trees.

    The idea of distributing Noah’s pudding to the wider community in different North American cities is credited to Fethullah Gülen, a Turkish Muslim cleric living near Philadelphia.

    Gülen is the leader of a global movement that reconciles Islamic mysticism with modern education and tolerance of other faiths. The author of more than 60 books, Gülen is responsible for the creation of a worldwide network of schools, universities, media outlets and community organizations. He has condemned Islamic terrorism and has also spoken out against the Israeli offensive in Gaza.

    Local Turkish businessmen and other members of the community underwrote the costs of the Noah’s pudding distribution, said Kala.

    The Dialog Foundation started distributing the pudding three years ago. It also holds Turkish arts festivals, intercultural dinners and interfaith conferences throughout the year.

    Last week, volunteers distributed the pudding to 1,500 worshippers at St. Joseph’s Oratory.

    The foundation will hold distributions at churches, university campuses, schools, nursing homes and homeless shelters in the coming weeks.

    On Feb. 17, volunteers will cook Noah’s pudding with students at Concordia University. The cooking session will provide an opportunity to talk with students from a wide spectrum of religious and cultural backgrounds, he said.

    Other pudding distributions will take place at the following locations:

    St. John Brébeuf Parish, 7777 George St., LaSalle: Sunday at 9 a.m. and 11 a.m.

    Montreal North, door to door distribution: Sunday and Monday, after 5 p.m.

    Montreal Police Station 39, Montreal North: Feb. 3 at 11 a.m.

    McGill University: International Student Network potluck dinner at Gert’s, 3480 McTavish St., Feb. 4, 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.

    The Church of St. James the Apostle, 1439 Ste. Catherine St. W.: Feb. 8 at 11 a.m.

    Dans la Rue: Volunteers will ride in the van to share Noah’s Pudding with street youth. Feb. 8 and 9 at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.

    École Sogut (a Turkish private school): Feb. 9 at noon.

    Université de Montréal, 3200 Jean Brillant St.: Feb. 10, 10 a.m to 2 p.m.

    Montreal Unitarian Church, 5035 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W.: Feb. 15, 11 a.m to 1 p.m.

    Concordia University, Multi-faith Chaplaincy Services, 2090 Mackay St.: Feb. 17, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

    © Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

    Noah’s Pudding: The recipe

    Esem Baran (left), Risele Alper (centre) and Demex Kesmen pour cooked Noah’s Pudding in a cooling vat at the Turkish Cultural Centre on January 17, 2009.

    Photograph by: Pierre Obendrauf, The Gazette

    There are endless versions of this nutritious pudding. Feel free to experiment with other grains, fruits and nuts or to substitute honey for the sugar. If desired, you may flavour it with rosewater or orange flower water after the pudding is cooked.

    The recipe calls for white pearl wheat. Pearl wheat resembles pearl barley but is lighter in colour. White wheat is a whole grain that has a paler colour than the more common red wheat. It is available at Middle Eastern groceries, bulk stores and health food stores. This version is made with milk but you may substitute water.

    Noah’s Pudding

    Serves 10

    3⁄4 cup (175 mL) white pearl wheat

    * 1⁄4 cup (50 mL) dried white beans

    * 1⁄4 cup (50 mL) dried chickpeas

    1⁄3 cup (75 mL) golden raisins

    1⁄3 cup (75 mL) whole, blanched almonds

    4 dried apricots, diced in 1/4-inch (6 mm) pieces

    ** 1 tablespoon (15 mL) fresh orange rind, chopped in 1⁄8-inch (3 mm) dice

    2 cups (500 mL) sugar

    4 cups (1 litre) of water, plus additional water for soaking and cooking

    2 cups (500 mL) of whole milk (you may substitute water)

    To garnish: shelled pistachios, chopped walnuts, pomegranate seeds and/or cinnamon

    * You may substitute 1/3 cup each of canned beans and chickpeas.

    ** Use a sharp knife or vegetable peeler to remove the zest (orange-coloured skin) of the orange. You can include a thin sliver of the white pith. Use a sharp knife to chop the zest.

    Rinse the wheat, white beans and chickpeas several times. Place each in a separate saucepan and add water to cover generously. Bring each to a boil, then simmer for 15 minutes. Cool and leave to soak overnight in the refrigerator.

    Soak the almonds overnight in cold water. Soak the raisins and apricots in water overnight or for at least two hours.

    The next day, drain the wheat, reserving the soaking water, and place it in a medium saucepan with 4 cups (1 litre) of water. (Use the soaking water). Bring to a boil, then lower the heat and simmer for one and a half hours, stirring occasionally, until the wheat is soft and plump. (Add extra water if needed.)

    Meanwhile, in separate, small saucepans, bring the beans and chickpeas to a boil and simmer until tender but not mushy, about one hour. (The cooking time can vary, depending on how fresh the beans and chickpeas are.) Squeeze the outer skins from the chickpeas and skim off any skins that float away from the beans .

    Drain the soaked almonds, raisins and apricots. Drain the cooked beans and chickpeas.

    Place the cooked wheat with its liquid in a large stock pot or the top of a double boiler. Add the milk. Partially purée the mixture by buzzing it with a hand blender for about 10 seconds. (Alternatively, use a potato masher.)

    Add the drained fruit and almonds, drained, cooked beans and chickpeas and the sugar to the wheat-milk mixture.

    Simmer for 30 minutes, stirring frequently, until the pudding thickens to the consistency of an Indian-style rice pudding. (You can adjust the consistency by adding extra milk or water or by increasing the cooking time.)

    Cool. Spoon into one large or several small bowls. Garnish with shelled pistachios, walnuts and pomegranate seeds or sprinkled with cinnamon.