This short essay is written as a reaction to Paul Weller and Ihsan Yilmaz (eds), European Muslims, Civility and Public life.
Perspectives on and from the Gülen Movement, London/New York:2012. I was asked to give a Dutch reflection on the
general theme of the book. In line with the
general tendency of the Gülen Movement I pay first attention to the concrete
activities of the sohbets and only in
the last part to the philosophical and religious doctrines.
In 1980
(or 1981) the first Group of activists gathered around Necder Başaran, who
worked as imam and religious leader of the new Akyzili Foundation in Rotterdam.
This name was chosen after a follower of Fethullah Gülen in Izmir who donated
his house to become a boarding house for high school students in Izmir. These
were in many cases migrants from East Turkey to the booming industrial town on
the west coast. Gülen himself was born also in East Turkey and his great
influence started among this new urban population who sought a new social
network and cultural and religious support. Akyazili also started a boarding
house in Rotterdam. The activists also started after-school tuition for Turkish
pupils of primary schools who needed extra help to survive in the Dutch
educational system. In 1983 the municipality of Rotterdam provided Akyazili
with a larger building, a former public library. In 1986 they moved again to a
better building, Diergaardesingel in Rotterdam.
1. Help for pupils in primary and secondary education.
This first activity developed
quickly to other major towns of the Netherlands. Under NPOINT (Dutch Platform
for Innovation of Education and Talent Development) six foundations are
cooperating: White Tulip in Haarlem and Amsterdam, Instituut het Centrum in
Rotterdam, CEMIN in Utrecht, Kennisplein in Tilburg and other towns in the
province of Brabant, De Ijssel in the eastern province, Meridiaan in
Amersfoort. All these foundations want to stimulate school participation and
development of talents, language courses in Dutch. They receive in many cases
modest subsidies from local governments for a small permanent staff, for
buildings and technical equipment, but most work is done by volunteers.
2. Information: Zaman (mostly in Turkish for Dutch people, some editions in Dutch)
In 1986 the activists in Rotterdam
started a branch of the Gülen related newspaper Zaman, especially for the Turkish community in the Netherlands.
Between 2005 and 2010 (?) a monthly Dutch edition was published and distributed
for free in the Netherlands with issues such as integration of Muslims in Dutch
society, the rise of Islamophobia, activities of Hizmet people. Zaman also
makes Television programs of encounters between Turkish migrants and local
Dutch society. They sell these to local television networks. Incidentally Zaman
received modest subsidies from the Rotterdam municipality.
3. A Turkish Rotary club: philantropy in a social setting
HOGIAF is a network of some 600
businessmen of Turkish descent, who come together in 8 local chapters (under
different names: the series of foundations and organisaties is very long!).
They discuss the promotion of their business, give mutual support. They are
also important as donators for the volunteer activities and support the Gülen
related activities through their philanthropy.
4. Cosmicus as a Students´ Movement and 5. Islam and Dialogue
In 1995 the Stichting Cosmicus was established by students and young graduates
of Turkish origin in the Netherlands as a foundation with the purpose to
support (mostly Turkish and Moroccan) students from elementary schools until
colleges and universities in their study and personal development, and to help
them start a thriving career. The successful older students of Turkish descent
should serve as role models of success in the new country. The same model was
also started by other Turkish and some Moroccan people. They did so at home or
in community centres. The first chairman of Cosmicus, Ümit Taş searched in a
Latin-Dutch dictionary of 1910 and found the word Cosmicus in the meaning of the universe, worldly, but also as world
citizen. Second chairman was Turan Yazir who was succeeded in 2002 by Gürkan
Çelik. Universities, municipalities and private funds donated subsidies for
activities, especially for the mentor project. From the early years also some
ethnic Dutch people joined the leadership of the organization. After starting Cosmicus, Ùmit Taş
also initiated a Foundation Islam and Dialogue. (More about it below, in relation to the Dialogue Academy).
Cosmicus branches were established in all major
university towns of the Netherlands. Initially the centre was in Amsterdam,
between 2000 and 2002 in Utrecht, while since then the headquarters are in
Rotterdam. Stichting Cosmicus is
known for its academic network, training for leadership, conferences for job
career planning, also for sports and social events like lectures and meals at
the occasion of iftar (breaking the
fast in a festive manner at the end of a day in Ramadan) and even Christmas.
One of its means of communication is the magazine De.Cascade with articles by Dutch and Turkish authors on a variety
of academic and social subjects. Conferences at the universities of Rotterdam,
Tilburg, and Nijmegen resulted in a small book on Promoters of Peace,
discussing among others Desiderius Erasmus, John Paul II, Fethullah Gülen,
Dalai Lama and Sister Teresa of Calcutta. For these dialogues and contacts the Dialogue
Academy where we are now was established in 2007 as a place and a small
community for social and political debates.
A special activity of Cosmicus, aiming at very
young children was the publication of a Dutch translation of six Turkish books
for children in the age 6-12. Stichting
Cosmicus is quite keen and well experienced in seeking Dutch funds for its
activities. For the package of six children books it received funding from
well-known cultural funds, the VSB Fonds (related to Fortis Bank) and Oranje
Fonds (related to the Dutch royal family).
6. Cosmicus schools.
Some 100 of the about 1000 members of
Cosmicus are teachers. They gather twice a year to discuss their position and
contribution to society. About 2000 they proposed to start a series of Gülen
schools. They were not successful in individual schools, but were sought by
other organizations in combinations. In 2006 Cosmicus College started as a high
school and in 2008 in Amsterdam the Cosmicus Montessori College has opened.
Since then also two Cosmicus primary schools were opened (Rotterdam and
Amsterdam).
The Dutch Cosmicus schools follow a
quite different procedure, compared to the more elitist schools in Turkey,
Albania, Indonesia and many other countries. Perhaps they are even closer to
the original inspiration of Hoja Effendi. They are emancipation schools. Like
the quite similar Lucerna schools in Belgium, they are fully subsidised by the
government. Cosmicus Rotterdam even received € 300.000 from the Minister of
Education Maria van der Hoeven as a help in the start. Building are provided by
the city of Rotterdam and Amsterdam. They have a majority of Turkish pupils,
but the Turkish language if forbidden absolutely on the premises of the school
and during classes. They are according to Dutch law not public, but private
schools. Their identity is not religious and religious classes are even not
included in the curriculum. World citizenship (wereldburgerschap) is the ideological background or ideal of the
schools. They are member of the international network of UNESCO schools and the
millennium goals of the UN are important ideals in the lessons about world
citizenship. Cosmicus schools also have taken the initiative to introduce in
2009 INESPO in our country: International Environment &
Scientific Project Olympiad. The Amsterdam high school cooperates closely with
the Anne Frank House for projects of anti-racism and more outspoken even anti-semitism.
After a decade dominated by Gülen
sympathisers of the old generation (who were still reading the Risale-i Nur
between 1980-1990) the young and better educated group has taken over the lead
in the Gülen movement since the early 1990s. One of these is Alaatin Erdal who
was the director of the first boarding house in 1993. He was later the director
of Dutch Zaman, and since 2010 for
the Christian Democratic Party one of the top officials in the Rotterdam
administration of Charlois. This
younger generation can speak Dutch fluently, they are well versed in the
complicated administration of the bureaucracy, they know how to present
their ideas and plans and how to find
subsidies from the Dutch central and local government. Most policies about the
new minorities in our country are developed by the white officials, but here we
find initiatives from the side of Turkish migrants or second generation
Turkish-Dutch activists. In their schools and after-school tuition the Turkish
origin is still visible, but they are open to all groups in society and try to
involve many other people in their activities as well.
Mrs. Dorith Vlottes, Coordinator of Education in the primary school of Cosmicus Rotterdam with Mehmet Cerit, general director of Cosmicus.
7. Dialogue Academy.
With the generous help of HOGIAF-members and some public subsidies, in 2007 the Dialogue Academy was established in Rotterdam, Rochussenkade 122 (in a building where also Islam and Dialogue found plave for its offices). While Islam and Dialogue focuses on the inter-religious meeting, the Dialogue Academy wants to be a platform for the debate on the multicultural society. It organized meetings between politicans of national parties with younger people, many of foreign origin. During the election campaign this was a very fruitful. In this blog I have reported quite often about their meetings. Besides public meetings, Dialogue Academy also has small scale programs like the new initiative to urge parents of Moroccan and Turkish pupils in primary schools to become more active in the schools of their children by attending evenings of meetings with teachers, by voluntary activities in the schools.
The Dialogue Academy is planning to work more intensively with the Foundation Islam and Dialogue on the inter-religious forum in our country. Islam and Dialogue has a very intensive cooperation with some Protestant Churches in Rotterdam. They alternate between the building of the Rochussenstraat and a Protestant Church in Delfshaven for a continuing programme on the biblical persons in the Muslim representations of Qur'an and Hadith.
They also join forces with the Foundation Dialogue Haaglanden (The Hague: the Gülen people like to start many foundations that form a loose network. It is sometimes quite difficult to make lists of all these activities.
The Dialogue Academy is planning to work more intensively with the Foundation Islam and Dialogue on the inter-religious forum in our country. Islam and Dialogue has a very intensive cooperation with some Protestant Churches in Rotterdam. They alternate between the building of the Rochussenstraat and a Protestant Church in Delfshaven for a continuing programme on the biblical persons in the Muslim representations of Qur'an and Hadith.
They also join forces with the Foundation Dialogue Haaglanden (The Hague: the Gülen people like to start many foundations that form a loose network. It is sometimes quite difficult to make lists of all these activities.
Until here we have summarized the
most important of the social initiatives of Gülen inspired people in the
Netherlands. They have influenced the lives of tens of thousands of young
people by tuition, in students’ movements, in the multicultural schools,
started not from the existing bureaucracy but from below. Like the first
decades of the work of Gülen. Not the luxurious elite schools, but schools filled
with problems that were seen as challenges and possibilities.
Religion is not a first issue in Gülen related activities: it is even often
neglected and there is more concentration on social and economic issues. But
the movement experiences problems through the religious background of Fethullah Gülen and
the general sentiment of Islamophobia in our country. On 4 July 2008 the Dutch Public
Television broadcasted a documentary on Gülen related activities, concentrating
on the boarding houses. Two teenage boys were in the programme in a quite
sensational way, their faces made unrecognizable and their voices also
transformed so as not to be identified. They complained about discipline,
physical punishment, compulsion in religious matters. The programme in general
stated that Fethullah Gülen had a double agenda and sought influence under the
mask of dialogue, but in fact wanted to introduce shari’a law in Turkey and is seen as a threat towards a pluralist
and secular society. Here the debate of Kemalist versus religious parties of
Turkey entered Dutch television (in this case in the programme NOVA, in mid-2008). Besides some unidentified
boarding houses also the newly established Dialoog
Academie, the Dutch office of the newspaper Zaman and the Cosmicus School, all three in Rotterdam were here
connected with the Gülen movement and discredited. Soon afterwards members of
parliament have put questions to the government that initially spoke quite
soothing (because the intelligence officials saw no negative aspects of these
initiatives), but finally the government has decided to a further inquiry. The
inquiry, by Prof. Martin van Bruinessen of Utrecht University, resulted in a
quite positive public report, where only two points remained critical: the
severe discipline in some boarding houses (that were popular in the period
1990-2008, but now all are closed) and the well-known Turkish critical
journalists who were put in jail for their negative statement about the Hizmet
movement.
In the report of Van Bruinessen one case is
mentioned about a teenager who discovered a homosexual inclination and
therefore was excluded from further participation in the boarding house and the
movement where he in fact had sought a ‘remedy’ to be ‘cured’ from his
inclination. This is an indication of some problematic issues about the Gülen
movement in the Netherlands. There are few religious specialists among the
movement that is generally characterized as an orthodox or conservative group.
In science, in social activities they are without any doubt progressive and
optimistic, keen on emancipation and personal development of the members. But
in religious ideology there is little debate. In the report by Van Bruinessen one Kurd man is quoted who received advice from an abi or religious authority in the Netherlands that he should not give his children Kurdish names. But this anti-Kurdish sentiment is not the general policy of the Hizmet movement. Just one quote from a website with information about Gülen and the Kurd struggle.
Starting
from 2000 he has been commending wealthier families from the western part of
Turkey to locate and befriend poor families in the east. He urged them, for
example, to spend Eids together. In response, thousands went to the
eastern part of Turkey, stayed there and helped the poor families through
the Kimse Yok Mu relief charity. He urged schools in the west to provide
scholarships for the poor children who otherwise could not afford a good
education: hundreds of children got their secondary education on full
scholarship in well-established schools in the big cities of Turkey such as
Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir. He persuaded philanthropic businessmen to
open ‘reading rooms’ in the eastern part of Turkey: hundreds were opened and
thousands of children received free maths and science courses. Gülen also urged
teachers to give voluntary lessons in those reading rooms: hundreds of
volunteers responded and moved to the region without any expectation of
material reward for doing so. Indeed, most of the recent social mobility from
west to east in Turkey can be credited to Fethullah Gülen’s good counsels.
Also, after the change in the law which permitted TV broadcasting in Kurdish,
it was on Gülen’s advice that the first private channel broadcasting in
Kurdish, namely Dunya TV, was established.
At the
end of the day the Gülen movement is a social movement; it cannot and does not
aspire to make laws. Recently, Prime Minister Erdogan declared that nobody
should expect from him amendments to the law about the right to educate in
one’s mother tongue. As an opinion leader Gülen stated that it is a fundamental
right to educate in one’s mother tongue and getting education in one’s mother
tongue is an option in the established democracies in the West. Now, was
there any obligation on him to do this, especially in view of the opposition of
the current government on this issue? Simply, no. Some people asked that
if Gülen really believes that this is a natural right, why don’t Gülen schools
offer education in Kurdish as an option? The answer is: it is still illegal to do so.
Another issue is the Alevi tradition within Turkish Muslim tradition. In Ali Ünal´s book on Gülen as Advocate of Dialogue, 67-70 there are liberal statements (Alevi should have freedom of religion, worship, should be allowed to erect cem-houses), but also critical issues like the position that they should stick to a written tradition (preferably of people like Yunus Enre) and not to the vague oral traditionsas they practise nowadays. Dialogue is and tolerance not the same as indifference or neglect of opposed ideas and practice.
Gurkan Celik has written a doctoral dissertation at Tilburg University on the ideal of social cohesion though dialogue and education. Like the writings by Fethullah Gülen himself, it concentrates on ethical values and virtues, rather than on prescripts of shari’a. This idea was continued in a project by the Dialogue Academy in cooperation with the law faculty of Leiden University on the cross-cultural doctrines of virtues. Here it was stressed that Gülen follows the line of Muslim philosophers like Ibn Miskawayh and Al-Ghazali who continued the doctrines of Plato and Aristotle about virtues as self-realisation of human beings. In his writings Gülen makes a clear distinction between shari’a strict rules for religious rituals (prayer, pilgrimage, fasting, so-called ‘ibadāt) in contrast to civil practice or mu’amalāt where the individual is less bound by fixed rules. In his major writings (the 4 volumes on Sufism, Essentials of the Islamic Faith, Questions and answers about faith) Gülen nearly exclusively discusses mystical and philosophical issues and very seldom detail of shari’a rules. That is very encouraging and important. However, the debate on Islam in Western Europe, also in the Netherlands, often is about the veil, ritual slaughtering, mixed marriage, apostacy. Gülen rejects any violence, but for the rest his voice and that if his followers or sohbets is not so much heard in the debate about Islam in Europe.
Gurkan Celik has written a doctoral dissertation at Tilburg University on the ideal of social cohesion though dialogue and education. Like the writings by Fethullah Gülen himself, it concentrates on ethical values and virtues, rather than on prescripts of shari’a. This idea was continued in a project by the Dialogue Academy in cooperation with the law faculty of Leiden University on the cross-cultural doctrines of virtues. Here it was stressed that Gülen follows the line of Muslim philosophers like Ibn Miskawayh and Al-Ghazali who continued the doctrines of Plato and Aristotle about virtues as self-realisation of human beings. In his writings Gülen makes a clear distinction between shari’a strict rules for religious rituals (prayer, pilgrimage, fasting, so-called ‘ibadāt) in contrast to civil practice or mu’amalāt where the individual is less bound by fixed rules. In his major writings (the 4 volumes on Sufism, Essentials of the Islamic Faith, Questions and answers about faith) Gülen nearly exclusively discusses mystical and philosophical issues and very seldom detail of shari’a rules. That is very encouraging and important. However, the debate on Islam in Western Europe, also in the Netherlands, often is about the veil, ritual slaughtering, mixed marriage, apostacy. Gülen rejects any violence, but for the rest his voice and that if his followers or sohbets is not so much heard in the debate about Islam in Europe.
Internal cooperation in Islam is difficult in
our country: there are so many divisions even among Muslims of Turkish origin:
Diyanat, Milli Görüş, Süleimanli, Nurculuk, Hizmet, it all present in the town
of Rotterdam. At close distance from this place there are two competing Islamic
Universities, both with a Turkish rector. The rector of the Islamic University
of Rotterdam, Ahmad Akgündüz, once told me that he had a dream at the time of
his invitation to come and teach in Rotterdam. He also had an an invitation for
Princeton University. But then in this dream Said Nursi appeared and called him
to Rotterdam ‘because the European Christians are not able to counter
secularisation.’ Akgündüz obeyed and became rector in Rotterdam. His institute
cooperates with Christians and secular humanists in this country, like this
Dialogue Academy. That is proposed and stimulated by Hoja Effendi, the man of
peace and dialogue. It is, however, my personal conviction that we are not
called to seek and promote religion against secularism, but within a secular
society. Dialogue should not be among the established conservative leaders of
the religions, but with the young and creative the critical and heretic perhaps
more than with the old generation and the vested interest of traditional
leaders. I am confident, that the quite flexible and action oriented young
generation of Gülen friends is able to meet these challenges also in our
country, for the best of secular, Christian and Muslim people.
Bruinessen,
Martin van
2010 De Gülen-beweging in Nederland,
Universiteit Utrecht.
Canatan, Kadir
2001 Turkse
Islam. Perspectieven op organisatievorm en leiderschap in Nederland,
Doctoral dissertation, University of Rotterdam.
Celik, Gurkan
2010 The Gülen Movement. Building social cohesion
through dialogue and education, Delft, Eburon
2011 [with Karel Steenbrink] ‘De gulden middenweg
van de islamitische ethiek’, Filosofie en
Praktijk, vol. 32/3:74-89.
Fähmel, Anita
2009 Dossier Fethullah Gülen, Leefbaar Rotterdam.
Landman, Nico
1992 Van
mat tot minaret. De institutionalisering van de Islam in Nederland,
Amsterdam: VU Uitgeverij.