If one believes that the battle for the nation’s soul is occurring, not just in Washington, D.C., but in schools across the nation, the steady advance of Turkish-Gulen Charter Schools may be cause for alarm. Fethullah Gulen is a Turkish Islamic cleric who fled his native country in 1998, after being charged with seeking to overthrow the secular Turkish government. He currently lives in exile at a 28-acre mountain complex in the Pocono Mountains, with more than $25 billion of assets at his command.
The 135 charter schools associated with
the Gulen Movement (GM) enroll more than 45,000 students andcomprise the
largest charter school network in the United States — all of which are fully
funded by American taxpayers. Fethullah Gulen has been underinvestigation by
the government since 2011.
That investigation, carried out by FBI
and the Departments of Labor and Education, is centered around charter school
employees who are allegedly engaged in kicking back part of their salaries to
the Muslim movement also known as Hizmet (service to others), founded by Gulen.
Gulen initiated his movement in Izmir, a city on Turkey’s Aegean coast,more than 40 years ago, preaching impassioned sermons to
his followers, who may now number as many as six million. In Turkey, the Gulen
Movement has been accused of pushing for a hardline Islamic state. Despite this
reality, government officials investigating the kickback scheme are apparently
satisfied that there is no religious agenda being disseminated in America.
Their investigation is centered around the hundreds of Turkish teachers,
administrators, and other staffers employed under the H1B visa program, who may
or may not be misusing taxpayer money.
This would appear to be a stunningly
naive approach to the issue. H1B visas allow US employers to
hire foreign workers in specialty occupations on a temporary basis. “Specialty
occupations” aredefined as
“requiring theoretical and practical application of a body of highly
specialized knowledge in a field of human endeavor.” Gulen schools are among
the nation’s largest users of the H1B visas. In 2009, they received government
approvals for 684 visas. The Harmony School, a Gulen-related institution, has
applied for more H1B visas than any educational institution in the country.
GM officials at some of the charter schools that ostensibly
specialize in math and science, claim they need to fill teaching spots with
Turkish teachers. At the Young Scholars of Central Pennsylvania Charter School
in State College, Ruth Hocker, former president of the parents’ group, grew
suspicious when certified American teachers began to be replaced by uncertified
Turks with limited English-speaking skills who, despite that limitation,
commanded higher salaries. Parents pointed out that these uncertified teachers
were moved from one charter to another when their “emergency” credentials
expired. They also spoke about a pattern of sudden turnovers of Turkish
business managers, administrators, and board members.
Similar complaints arose in
Texas, where it was revealed that hundreds of Turkish teachers and
administrators were also working with H1B visas. In addition, the Harmony
School group was using taxpayer money to fund Gulen’s movement via school
construction and renovation projects. Despite assertions that the bidding
process on those projects was fair, records showed that virtually all of the
work has been done by Turkish-owned contractors, according to the New
York Times.
All of the above raises the obvious question: if these schools are
traditional American charter schools that do nothing more than “follow the
state curriculum,” as Tansu Cidav, the acting CEO of the Truebright Science
Academy in North Philadelphia contends, why is it necessary to hire foreign
teachers and coordinate activities nationwide?
A federal document released in 2011 may provide the answer. It
posits that Gulen’s charter schools may in fact be madrassahs, where students
are “brain-washed” to serve as proponents of the New Islamic World Order Gulen
purportedly seeks to create.
Former Muslim Brotherhood member Walid
Shoebat illuminates the
bigger picture. Shoebat, who was highly critical of a CBS “60 Minutes” report on
Gulen (who refused to be interviewed for the piece), likens the cleric’s
movement to the leftist Center for American Progress (CAP) And radical
billionaire George Soros. “Both men are extremely wealthy, use that money to
surreptitiously spread their ideologies, and like to operate behind the scenes
as much as possible,” writes Shoebat.
The American Thinker’s Janet Levy takes it
one step further. After noting that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
belongs to the AKP political party founded by
Gulen upon his arrival in Pennsylvania, she points out that “Turkey is
reverting to its historical Ottoman Empire-inspired Islamic fundamentalism,”
even as “it is pursuing a stealth or cultural jihad against the West, in large
part through the efforts of Fethullah Gülen, a Turkish Islamic theologian.”In a
1999 video, Gulen himself spoke of a surreptitious plan for taking over the
Turkish government:”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 …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[.]”
The movement is well on its way towards
achieving that aim. GM is now active in 140
countries. Aside from its charter school empire, other interests
including boarding schools, universities, banks, media companies, newspapers,
charities, and think tanks.
This is not the first investigation conducted of Gulen’s empire.
In 2008, members of the Netherlands’ Christian Democrat, Labor, and
Conservative parties agreed to cut several million euros in government funding
for organizations affiliated with Gulen. An investigation ensued when Erik Jan
Zürcher, director of the Amsterdam-based International Institute for Social
History, along with five former followers who had worked for Gulen, told Dutch
television that the Gulen community was moving step-by-step to topple the
secular order.
In Pennsylvania, neighbors of Gulen’s fortress retreat complain of
hearing automatic gunfire and the drone of a surveillance helicopter that
constantly searches for intruders. 100 Turkish guards stand watch over the
property as well. If this man and his movement–which continues to expand–have
nothing to hide, they have a remarkable way of showing it.
As a Turkish observer speaking to the
New Republic noted, “No society would tolerate this big of an
organization being this untransparent.” The FBI’s new investigation against
Gulen’s organization brings us one step closer to exposing what goes on behind
the closed doors of Gulen’s empire.
SOURCE: FPM Right Side News Arnold Ahlert is a former NY Post
op-ed columnist currently contributing to JewishWorldReview.com,
HumanEvents.com and CanadaFreePress.com. He may be reached at atahlert@comcast.net THURSDAY, 01 NOVEMBER 2012 05:41
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