AND WHAT I SAY UNTO YOU I SAY UNTO ALL, WATCH. - MARK 13:37

Showing posts with label Turkish Union. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turkish Union. Show all posts

Friday, November 1, 2013

What's Going on in Turkey?

There was revelation about two weeks ago that in early 2012, Turkey outed Israeli spies to Iran in a very disturbing breach of trust for a NATO member and ally of the United States.  Turkey denies that it betrayed the agents, but the U. S. Congress thought that the relationship between Turkish intelligence and Iranian intelligence was to close and killed a deal to sell drones to Turkey in June of 2012 according to an article in the Jerusalem Post.

Although Turkey and Iran appear to have an openly hostile relationship over their differences in the Syrian civil war, Turkey has continued purchasing natural gas and oil from Iran.  In 2012 it was revealed that Turkey was sending gold to Iran in exchange for gas.  This loophole in the sanctions has since closed, however Turkey continues trading with Iran for gas and oil and say that they would buy more if they could according to Hurriyet Daily News.

Turkey, for their part has always claimed that Iran has a right to develop nuclear power.  They make this claim because they would like to have nuclear power plants of their own.  In fact they have a four unit nuke in the works.  According to Balkans.com, they expect the environmental impact report to be completed by 2014 and to have the units up and online by 2023.  A subsidiary of Rosatom Nuclear Energy a state corporation of Russia will build own and operate the nuclear power plant.  The Turks have serious differences with the Russians.  But here again, the Turks are able to overlook their moral outrage over the actions of the Assad regime in Syria when it serves their interest.

It was also announced that Turkey will be doing business with another Assad ally, China.  They have announced that they will be looking to the Chinese for a new missile defence system.  The United States and more broadly, NATO are concerned about NATO member Turkey buying non-compatible weapons system.

There are many reports that Turkey aided Israel in its latest attack on Syria.  It is being widely reported that Turkey supplied Israel with intelligence for the attack.  A Lebanese news source, however, is saying that Israel was used by Turkey as a proxy to attack Syria in revenge for their jet that was shot down in June of 2012.  Whatever the truth, it was a win-win for Israel and Turkey to destroy these weapons which were being delivered to Hezbollah.

The government of Turkey is a reflection of its leader, Prime Minister Erdoğan.  He is a master of manipulating situations to his own benefit and that is what we see happening in Turkey.  They will always do what is in their own best interest.  Sometimes, however, these decisions have proven to be rather short sighted and Mr. Erdoğan is not as popular as he once was.  Next year there will be elections in Turkey.  Erdoğan is probably running for president since a constitutional change has made the Turkish presidency a powerful position.  A few years ago, Erdoğan would have been a shoe-in.  But now his popularity has slipped and he may not win.








Sunday, October 6, 2013

PM Erdogan announces democratization package

Prime Minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan wants Turkey to be the model for a tolerant peaceful Islamic democracy.  He is one of a number of people who are vying to become the leader of the Islamic world.  He sees it as the natural position for Turkey considering their history as the center of the Islamic Caliphate during the Ottoman dynasty which ended in 1924. There is a great deal of interest in the Middle East in the revival of the Caliphate.

To this end, the prime minister has introduced a package of democratizing changes to Turkish Law and Constitution.  We have included two links to separate article covering this.  The first is a brief synapsis of the changes.  the second is a longer and more detailed article.

PM Erdogan announces democratization package

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has announced the highly-anticipated ’democratization package’ at a press conference held in capital Ankara.
Erdogan mentioned the following legal amendments on enhancing political rights:
Election threshold
Erdogan said the government would propose three options to be discussed in the coming weeks for the election threshold:
a) Maintaining the current threshold of 10%
b) Lowering the threshold to 5% while implementing single-member district constituency system in groups of five.
c) Removing the threshold altogether and fully implementing the single-member district system.
Erdogan also said the current threshold on parties for receiving state aid would be lowered to 3% from the current 7%.


PM Erdogan announces democratization package

ANKARA - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayip Erdogan has unveiled a number of reforms on issues regarding political rights, such as election threshold, party organization, and propaganda in non-Turkish languages.

Announcing the democratization package, Erdogan elaborated on the new reforms and amendments regarding education.

He stated that they thoroughly reviewed the different practices of education in different languages and dialects in many countries with different methods.

"First of all, a law amendment in 2003 made it possible to open private courses to teach different languages and dialects traditionally used by our citizens in daily life as language courses were made available within the body of these courses for the same purposes," he said.

Erdogan reminded that they later paved the way for the establishment of departments in universities for training in different languages and dialects.

As for the democratization of education system, Erdogan added that they introduced a new system providing the opportunity to learn different languages and dialects by taking elective courses upon request.

"Now we are enabling providing education in different languages and dialects at private schools," said Erdogan.

Turkish PM Erdogan noted that the expression "private training centers may be established in order to provide education in the different languages and dialects traditionally used by Turkish citizens in daily life" was added to the Law on Education and Training in Foreign Languages and Learning Different Languages and Dialects of Turkish Citizens, making it possible to provide education in different languages and dialects in private schools.

"Council of Ministers will determine the languages and dialects to be used in education at the said schools and certain courses of these schools will be in Turkish," Erdogan further said.

- "Nevsehir University" into “Haci Bektas-i Veli University"

Within the framework of the democratization package, Turkish Premier also dwelled upon the change in the name of the "Nevsehir University."

"The name of `Nevsehir University` will be changed to `Haci Bektas-i Veli University`," said Erdogan, adding that it would be realized through a law amendment.

Haci Bektas-i Veli was a prominent religious figure of Alevi belief, who lived and taught from 1209 to 1271 in Anatolia.

Friday, September 13, 2013

Turkey Rising

Turkey's influence in the world has been increasing for several years.  One of their goal is that Istanbul would be an international financial hub.  The words of the president of Turkey, Abdullah Gul, are instructive about where they see themselves fitting into the global financial structure.  They view themselves in the near future as the center of a world financial structure based on Islamic financial principles.

Gul calls for a new global financial system

Turkish President Abdullah Gul said, "the international economic system seems almost to act on a balance of economic terror," emphasizing the need to formulate a new global financial system.

Speaking at the opening ceremony of the International Forum on Financial Systems at Wow Convention Center in Istanbul, Gul said the global economy had been going through very turbulent times recently.

The root cause of the turbulance comes from the issues in the financial system, which ultimately has impact on the whole world, said Gul, addng that the idea of having the forum was very important to search for alternative finanical systems and methods to speed up the process of overcoming the crisis.

Gul noted that Islamic finance had fallen behind conventional banking since the issue of Islamic banking and finance instruments had long been only an interest area for academics.

Reminding that the world has been undergoing a speedy globalization since the 1980s, Gul said the crisis which emerged in the American mortgage sector in 2008 had impacted Europe first and then the rest of the world.

"Therefore the states spending large amounts of funds to save the financial system in the beginning, in time themselves began to face crises in their own economies. As we assess the situation, we should be mindful of the fact that the crisis has not yet been completely overcome, global risks and uncertainities continue.

Gul said, "the international economic system seems almost to act on a balance of economic terror."

"For that reason the architecture of the modern financial system is increasingly being questioned. The most important reason of this discussion is that the means and ends have been confused," added Gul.

Highlighting that the fundamental principle of the financial system, raising the prosperity level of societies, had unfortunately been totally disregarded in the process which ended with the 2008 crisis, Gul said, "the financial system's architecture is based on expectations vis a vis a future, instead of real economic value. Financial instruments are not used for creating more employment, prosperity or income, but to satisfy increasing greed on the part of the financial actors in the system."

Sunday, August 25, 2013

A Fethullah Gülen Update

Fethullah Gülen is an Islamic scholar that is both a unifying and dividing force within Islam.  He has a good deal of power in his native Turkey because he has a number of followers among the ruling AK Party.   Politically, he is against the secularists that ruled turkey after the Ottoman Empire and still have a good deal of influence in Turkey.  He has may admirers within the AK party, however, prime minister Erdogan is not among them.  His relationship with Erdogan is tense.

Fethullah Gülen with Pope John Paul II
He has many non-Muslim admirers in the world because of his interfaith tolerance.  He met with pope John Paul II in 1998  The current Roman Catholic Pope, Francis, owns a Koran that was presented to him by Gülen when Francis was still Cardinal Bergoglio.  "Bergoglio was well informed about the work of the Centro Intercultural Dialogo Alba and asked them to pray for him." 
Many people, however, do not trust Gülen.  They believe that Gülen is primarily a missionary and the goal of the Gülen movement is to bring the entire world under Sharia law.  They see him as a person who seeks to do through education what al-Qaeda is attempting to do through force.  He current runs more than 1,000 schools worldwide with more that 2 million students.  Time magazine named him among the 100 most influential persons in the world for 2013.

Here are three recent article to give you an update on this powerful and influential man.

Poconos cleric still exerts much influence in Turkey

The spell of Fethullah Gulen, a 72-year-old Islamic preacher in the Poconos with schools around the globe and supporters said to number in the millions, has long loomed large over Turkey's constitutionally secular state.

Viewed by his followers as a tolerant, moderating force in global Islam, Gulen, who lives in Ross Township, Monroe County, is also spreading the influence of a country strategically positioned between Europe and Asia, promoting Turkish language and culture through his network of about 500 schools, including 130 publicly funded charter schools in the United States, three of which are in Pennsylvania.

His sympathizers, largely drawn from the same religiously minded professional class that helped sweep Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's Islamist-rooted AK Party to power in 2002, revere Gulen as an enlightened, pro-Western face of progressive Islam.

Secularist Turks see a more sinister agenda, suspecting followers of the theologian of infiltrating government and cultural institutions, exerting influence over organizations from the police and judiciary to the central bank and media.

Gulen's followers form a strong constituency at the heart of the AK Party, but their relationship with Erdogan — an autocratic figure who has centralized power around himself over the past decade — is showing signs of strain.

After accusations on social media that it was behind anti-government protests in June, a foundation representing Gulen's Hizmet movement spoke out to deny any such role.

"When the protest first began, it was completely peaceful and solely about the environment," the Journalists and Writers Foundation, which has Gulen as its honorary leader, said.

"At this early stage, some people sympathetic to the Hizmet Movement may have looked supportively on the protests out of personal choice," it said, adding this in no way suggested it was "involved in a conspiracy" supporting the demonstrations.

In a speech during the unrest, Gulen himself said protesters should not be dismissed as "capulcu", which loosely translates as "riff-raff", a term repeatedly used by Erdogan.

The protests, which began as a bid to stop development of Istanbul's Gezi Park, exposed chinks in Erdogan's armor, including his delicate relations with the Gulen movement.

Turkish media reports have cited surveys commissioned by the AK Party in recent days as putting the level of voters the Gulen movement could sway at around 3 percent of the electorate, while other sources have suggested they control up to 8 percent.

But Gulen's real power lies within the AK Party bureaucracy and his ability to rally support for or against Erdogan should he decide to run for the presidency.

Gulen, who has lived in the Saylorsburg area for 14 years, began his movement in Turkey in the 1960s. Followers preach religious tolerance and the importance of science and education to create moral harmony. Gulen's critics in the United States, however, believe the movement is a political base used to spread Islamic law, or Sharia.

In the charter schools connected to Gulen, included Truebright Science Academy in Philadelphia, no religion is taught. All emphasize science, math and technology.

Two years ago, the former principal of Truebright tried unsuccessfully to open a charter school in Allentown.

Gulen has said he would like to go back to Turkey but that his return might be used to stir political trouble, or that those who had persecuted him in the past might try to do so again. He left in 1999, shortly before the start of a case against him on charges of plotting to destroy the secular state and establish Islamic law.


A Rare Meeting With Reclusive Turkish Spiritual Leader Fethullah Gulen

Chief Rabbi of Israel Eliyahu Bakshi Doron with Fethullah Gülen
Fethullah Gulen is a Turkish religious spiritual leader, some say to millions of Turks both in Turkey and around the world, and the head of the Gulenist movement. His network of followers span the globe and have opened academically-focused schools across 90 countries, including the U.S.

The hocaefendi, meaning "respected teacher," as he is called, left Turkey in 1998 to avoid charges from the Turkish government of involvement in anti-secular activities. He eventually settled in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania, where he continues to preach, write, and guide his followers through television and the Internet.

He is sickly and doesn't travel, yet secular Turks worry his influence in political ranks will grow Islamist influence there and turn the country into a religious state. He is well-known in Turkey and across Central Asia, yet here in the United States, he remains a mystery.

The reclusive spiritualist keeps to his home in the Poconos, attended by believers, praying, lecturing, and claiming his influence is not as wide-ranging as his critics claim it to be. He rarely gives interviews, but I was recently allowed to travel to the idyllic resort-like compound he has been living in for around 14 years and meet with Gulen for an interview. An edited transcript of his translated answers follows:

The Atlantic: It's so rare to have an interview with you, why is that?

Fethullah Gulen: I grew up in a humble family with a shy personality. I accept these kind offers out of respect for those who are requesting such interviews, otherwise, I would prefer to live a secluded life just by myself.

We just saw your living quarters, and I saw a very small bed, a small mat, a small room. When you can have all the space you need, why do you use such a small area for yourself?

My whole life has been this way, during my years as a student, and later on in life I have always lived in such humble spaces. It's because I would like to live like my fellow citizens because I consider myself among them. By no means do I consider myself superior in any sense. Also, it is in my nature. I believe in the hereafter; I believe that's the true life, therefore I don't want to attach myself too much to this world.

Do you still teach every day?

I try to spend time with the students here every day as much as my health allows me. Some days my health prevents me from doing so, but I'd like to continue to study with them for as long as I am alive.

I heard you had no female students.

In Turkey, our friends are running a program in which female students are taking graduate-level courses in divinity. Here, the same system couldn't be replicated, but there are ladies who regularly follow the lectures.

According to Islamic tradition, is the role of women limited to motherhood?

No, it is not. The noble position of motherhood aside, our general opinion about women is that, while taking into account their specific needs, it should be made possible for them to take on every role, including the jobs of physician, military officer, judge and president of a country. As a matter of fact, in every aspect of life throughout history Muslim women made contributions to their society. In the golden age (referring to the years during Mohammed's lifetime) starting with Aisha, Hafsa, and Um Salama (the Prophet's wives), had their places among the jurists and they taught men.

When these examples are taken into consideration, it would be clearly understood that it is out of the question to restrict the lives of women, narrowing down their activities. Unfortunately, the isolation of women from social activities in some places today, a practice that stems from the misinterpretation of Islamic sources, has been a subject of a worldwide propaganda campaign against Islam.

If there is one thing that you would say to people here in this country who don't know a lot about you, your beliefs and your teachings, what would that message be?

I don't have a need to promote myself. I've never sought to be known or recognized by people. I simply share ideas I believe in with people around me. If people recognize me despite that, that's their mistake. But my core belief is to seek peace in the world, helping people eliminate certain malevolent attitudes through education as much as possible. An Arabic proverb says: "If something cannot be attained fully, it shouldn't be abandoned completely."

What message do you have for Americans who are concerned about the number of charter schools founded by people you inspire? How do you expect that influence to reflect on that educator's life?

First of all, let me clarify that I have never been personally involved in the founding or operation of any school. My influence, if any, has been through my sermons, talks and seminars. If I have any credit among the people who listen to my words, I have channeled that credit or credibility to encouraging them to establish institutions of education. I have tried to explain that we can achieve peace and reconciliation around the world only through raising a generation of people who read, who think critically, who love fellow humans and who offer their assets in service of humanity.

You don't seek to be noticed, yet you were one of TIME's 100 people, and called a voice of moderation that is desperately needed. Why? And what more could other moderate voices do to be heard today?

Although there are voices of moderation around the world, it's sometimes hard to reach a consensus among them. Perhaps what is more important is to be an example. Could Turkey be an example in this regard? Could this movement be an example, could this community be an example? I believe if we're to face ourselves, ask ourselves, perhaps because we haven't been able to set a good example and fully represent our values, there hasn't been great interest or sympathy in the world. But we are hopeful, that God willing this will happen. These views were not welcome in Turkey, but now they are slowly being embraced. If you remember, when I said 20 years ago that democracy was a process from which there would be no return, certain media organizations that are now supportive of the present government were very skeptical and they criticized me severely.

Turkey needs to cooperate with EU, Islamic scholar Gülen says

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen said Turkey needed to make use of certain dynamics to take on a more active role in its region in an interview with the American Atlantic magazine.

Gülen, a self-exiled theologian living in the United States’ Pennsylvania and the leader of the “Hizmet” (Service) Islamist religious movement, was defined as a “Turkish religious spiritual leader.”

He also said Turkey’s ongoing relationship with the European Union is partly to be commended for the level of democratization Turkey has achieved so far when he was asked how he viewed Turkey’s current political ambitions and place in the world. “It is crucial for Turkey to preserve and advance its achievements in democratization, thanks in part to its ongoing relationship with the European Union,” he said.

“If there is a favorable view and positive perception of Turkey due to its historic ties in the region, Turkey should be careful to protect those perceptions. It should protect its reputation. Good relationships and influence depend on love, respect, and good will, and collaborating around mutually agreeable goals. Is Turkey doing these fully today or not? This is a question that deserves discussion. If Turkey is indeed able to develop good diplomatic relations in the region, I believe it will be in the interest of Europe, the United States and the world. But I don’t think Turkey is doing what it can toward this end at the moment,” he said.

“His network of followers span the globe and have opened academically-focused schools across 90 countries, including the U.S.,” the magazine said. Gülen left Turkey in 1998 to avoid charges of involvement in anti-secular activities.