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Islamist Gulen Movement Runs U.S. Charter Schools

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  • Islamist Gulen Movement Runs U.S. Charter Schools

    ISLAMIST GULEN MOVEMENT RUNS U.S. CHARTER SCHOOLS
    By Stephen Schwartz

    American Thinker
    http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/isl amist_guelen_movement_runs.html
    March 29 2010

    A secretive foreign network of Islamic radicals now operates dozens of
    charter schools -- which receive government money but are not required
    to adopt a state-approved curriculum -- on U.S. soil. The inspirer of
    this conspiratorial effort is Fethullah Gulen, who directs a major
    Islamist movement in Turkey and the Turkish Diaspora but lives in
    the United States. He is number thirteen among the world's "50 most
    influential Muslims," according to one prominent listing.

    Gulen has been criticized as the puppet master for the current Turkish
    government headed by the "soft Islamist" Justice and Development
    Party, known by its Turkish initials as the AKP, in its slow-motion
    showdown with the secularist Turkish military. But Gulen is also known
    in Muslim countries for his network of 500-700 Islamic schools around
    the world, according to differing sources favorable to his movement. A
    more critical view of Gulen's emphasis on education asserts that his
    international network of thousands of primary and secondary schools,
    universities, and student residences is a key element in solidifying
    an Islamist political agenda in Turkey.

    But in startling news for Americans, the Gulen movement operates more
    than 85 primary and secondary schools on our soil. A roster of the
    Gulen schools and of the numerous foundations that support them has
    been released to the public by the patriotic group Act! for America.

    The Gulen schools are often designated as "science academies" and are
    concentrated in Texas, Ohio, and California -- with others scattered
    across the rest of the country.

    Two states that host Gulen charter schools are Arizona and Utah. In
    the former, the Daisy Education Corporation (the Gulen movement loves
    friendly-sounding institutional names) operates three schools in
    Tucson: one serving kindergarten through the eighth grade, another
    designated as an elementary school, and a middle-high school, all
    under the rubric of the Sonoran Science Academy. In Phoenix, it runs
    a satellite kindergarten-to-10th-grade campus with the same name.

    The appearance of Gulen charter schools in Tucson has produced critical
    attention in local media. The Tucson Weekly published a report at the
    end of 2009 noting that the Sonoran Science Academy in the southern
    Arizona town had been named "charter school of the year" by the Arizona
    Charter School Association. But writer Tim Vanderpool reported that
    according to one dismayed parent, who declined identification while
    pointing out the Gulen movement's history of intimidating critics,
    "the Sonoran Academy seems constantly to be bringing Turkish educators
    into the United States, and subjecting students to substitute teachers
    while the teachers await work visas."

    Vanderpool submits that "several Sonoran Academy parents believe
    the school has a hidden agenda to promote Gulen's brand of Turkish
    nationalism, advance sympathy for that country's political goals such
    as winning acceptance into the European Union, and discourage official
    acknowledgment of Turkey's genocide against the Armenians during World
    War I." Such issues are exotic, to say the least, for Tucson parents.

    Earlier in 2009, the Beehive Science and Technology Academy, a high
    school in Salt Lake City, came under similar critical scrutiny from
    the Salt Lake Tribune. That major daily's writer, Kirsten Stewart,
    reported that the Utah State Charter Board had begun an investigation
    of the Beehive school following complaints from a former teacher
    and an alarmed parent. The complainants asserted that while "Beehive
    advertises itself as a public charter school offering college-bound
    seventh through 12th graders a foundation in math and science ... the
    school has another mission: to advance and promote certain Islamic
    beliefs. They point to questionable financial transactions and hiring
    practices as proof of the school's covert ties to Turkish Muslim
    preacher Fethullah Gulen."

    But while Fatih Karatas, principal of the Sonoran Science Academy
    middle school in Tucson, flatly denied any connection with the Gulen
    movement, Beehive principal Muhammet "Frank" Erdogan in Salt Lake City
    admitted such links in the case of his school. The Salt Lake Tribune
    quoted his admission that along with him, "many of Beehive's teachers
    and founders also support Gulen's ideals." The paper also described
    how "Adam Kuntz, a first-year history teacher at Beehive, was fired
    [in spring 2009], he alleges, for taking academic freedom concerns to
    the state board. Earlier in the school year, Kuntz had a run-in with
    Erdogan over a lesson plan on World War II and the Holocaust. Erdogan
    wanted Kuntz to revise the plan and during a tape-recorded meeting,
    questioned conventional accounts of the genocide."

    Kelly Wayment, a parent of three children in the school, was removed
    from his post on the Beehive administrative board after he e-mailed
    other parents about Gulen movement influence in the school. Wayment
    told the Salt Lake Tribune that as in the Tucson case, teachers
    "tend to be from Turkey and central Asian republics living here on
    work visas."

    Americans should ask both why and how the Islamist Gulen movement
    has managed to establish such a large presence for Turkish religious
    political indoctrination in publicly financed education -- and should
    unite to oppose it.

    Stephen Suleyman Schwartz is executive director of the Center for
    Islamic Pluralism in Washington, D.C. This article was sponsored by
    Islamist Watch, a project of the Middle East Forum.
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