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  • Whitewashing Education Jihad

    WHITEWASHING EDUCATION JIHAD

    ASSYRIAN INTERNATIONAL NEWS AGENCY
    http://www.aina.org/news/20120518101232.htm
    AINA
    May 18 2012

    While the mainstream media continues to promote Turkey as a successful
    example of the coexistence of Islam, democracy, and economic stability
    -- referring to the country as "a bridge between East and West" and a
    potential asset to the European Union -- this view couldn't be farther
    from reality.

    In fact, Turkey has descended farther into the abyss of Islamization
    as it continues to refuse to acknowledge its genocide of Armenians,
    Assyrians, Greek Christians, and other minorities; denies its
    decades-long repression of its Kurdish population; and persists in its
    illegal occupation of the Republic of Cyprus. Islamic instruction,
    under the guise of religious culture and ethics classes, has become
    mandatory in state schools, further signaling the demise of secularism
    in Turkey. Meanwhile, veiling, an emblem of Islamization, has
    increased significantly within the last decade.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's public statements have
    also defied this optimistic view of Turkey as a "moderate" Islamic
    state. In 2007, he was quoted in Milliyet commenting on the term
    "moderate Islam" to describe his party, the AKP: "These descriptions
    are ugly, it is offensive and an insult to our religion. There is no
    moderate or immoderate Islam. Islam is Islam and that's it." On
    democracy, Erdogan has said, "Democracy is like a street car; you ride
    it as far as you need, and then you get off." About the function of
    mosques, he said, "The mosques are our barracks, the domes our
    helmets, the minarets our bayonets and the faithful our soldiers."

    It is clear that Turkey is reverting to its historical Ottoman
    Empire-inspired Islamic fundamentalism. At the same time, it is
    pursuing a stealth or cultural jihad against the West, in large part
    through the efforts of Fethullah Gulen, a Turkish Islamic theologian.

    Gulen has spawned the worldwide Gulen Movement, which pretends to
    espouse "understanding and respect" but in truth is dedicated to
    spreading the beliefs and influence of Islam and Turkey, especially
    through creation of Gulen schools, which now number more than 130 in
    26 states in America.

    Fethullah Gulen, profiled in a recent CBS 60 Minutes segment, "The
    Challenge of the Empty Chair: Fethullah Gulen," was referred to in the
    broadcast segment as the "most important Muslim cleric in the world
    today or at least one of the top two or three." In fact, Gulen is
    believed to be the driving force behind the ruling party in Turkey --
    the AKP -- that has spurred Islamization. The eponymous movement Gulen
    spawned controls the majority of preparatory schools in Turkey, and
    graduates have been strategically placed in positions of power and
    figure prominently in the police force, the media, and the courts.

    Anyone critical of Gulen has been arrested. In fact, the author of a
    book about the Gulen Movement was arrested last year and a Turkish
    newspaper office raided in an effort to destroy all copies.

    M. Hakan Yavuz, a Turkish professor at the University of Utah and
    astute observer of the Gulen movement, states that "its main goal has
    been the Islamization of Turkish society." Bayram Balci, another
    Turkish scholar who has studied the Gulen schools, said, "Fethullah's
    aim is the Islamization of Turkish nationality and the Turcification
    of Islam in foreign countries."

    The 60 Minutes segment glowingly described Gulen's teachings of
    tolerance, interfaith dialogue, and education and touted the alleged
    worldwide success of his movement. Although the portrayal of Fetullah
    Gulen and his movement was mostly adulatory, it wasn't a complete
    whitewash of a highly controversial figure of questionable motives who
    is believed to be, in large measure, responsible for transforming
    Turkey from a secular state to an anti-Christian, anti-American,
    anti-Western, and anti-Semitic Islamic one. Gulen, in partnership with
    Erdogan, has made a concerted effort to undermine and weaken the
    military, the traditional guardian of what was purported to be a
    secular democracy; take over the police, media, and courts; and
    suppress academics and journalists who criticize the regime.

    Reportedly, Gulen owns TV stations, banks, and trade associations and
    is worth over $25 billion.

    60 Minutes correspondent Lesley Stahl praised the academic success of
    Gulen schools, of which there are more than 1,000 worldwide, including
    130 schools in 26 states in the United States, representing the
    largest collection of charter schools in the country. Gulen was able
    to establish his charter school network in America fully funded by
    public money. In the CBS program, Stahl emphasized Gulen's commitment
    to education, with a special focus on math and science, as well as the
    stellar performance of the schools. She reported that Turkish teachers
    are brought in on visas -- a practice defended on camera by a Gulen
    spokesman who stated that the United States needs skilled teachers in
    math and science. Ironically, Turkey ranks far below the United States
    in math and science. Many of the Turkish teachers at the
    taxpayer-funded Gulen schools have poor English skills and
    questionable teaching credentials and experience. As was shown on
    camera, a significant number of them are listed in a school directory
    as teaching English -- hardly a rationale to import teachers to take
    jobs away from Americans. Information contained in visas for
    applicants to teach at Gulen schools in America listed no prior
    teaching experience for most of the applicants, with many having
    themselves attended Gulen schools.

    As for their reported academic excellence, the Gulen schools show high
    performance on school-administered state tests but lackluster results
    on college admission tests such as SAT and ACT. The Gulen schools' SAT
    average score of 1026 falls short of the 1100 considered to indicate
    college readiness. Former Gulen schoolteachers have reported state
    testing violations, lack of test monitors, and unqualified individuals
    administering tests.

    Many parents are unaware of any connection of the schools to the Gulen
    Movement and are unwittingly supporting it. There have been complaints
    of hyped advertising that mislead prospective students and their
    parents about class size, graduation rates, and college acceptances,
    especially since most of the schools lack a 12th grade, and the
    majority of students graduate from other schools.

    In the CBS special, Stahl dismisses complaints about the Gulen schools
    advancing an Islamic agenda in America with the baiting question of
    "So do you think there's a little bit of Islamophobia involved?" Yet a
    Washington Post blog post recently reported that an article in a
    popular Turkish daily newspaper quoted Gulen school insiders who
    outlined the U.S. Gulen schools' goals: "through education, we can
    teach tens of thousands of people the Turkish language and our
    national anthem, introduce them to our culture and win them over. And
    this is what the Gulen Movement is striving for."

    Stahl claims that CBS's investigations revealed that Islam is not
    taught at all at the schools and emphasizes that this would constitute
    an illegal practice in public schools. Federal guidelines prohibit
    schools from promoting religious instruction for a particular group as
    well as teacher participation in any prayer practice.

    In a 2008 article in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, a former teacher
    from a Gulen K-8 charter school in Minnesota reported that students
    pray regularly, led by a prostrating imam; celebrate Islamic religious
    holidays; perform ritual washing; eat halal food; and receive
    religious instruction from the Muslim American Society, a known
    affiliate of the Muslim Brotherhood. In fact, the school shares space
    with a mosque, and its director is an imam. Although the school
    defends the practice by saying that all prayer is "voluntary" and
    "student-led," this appears to be a whitewash of actual practices.

    While it is technically true that Islamic studies are taught after
    school, school buses don't leave school grounds until the class is
    over, and Islamic studies assignments are listed on the blackboard
    along with assignments for other subjects.

    The 60 Minutes special mentioned that the Gulen schools were being
    investigated by U.S. authorities. In fact, they are being investigated
    by the Department of Labor, the Department of Education, and the FBI
    due to alleged kickbacks of salaries to the movement and immigration
    fraud. One former teacher married to a Turkish teacher discovered that
    her husband was required to cash his check and give back 40% to the
    movement. Posts on a charter school watchdog blog translated Gulen
    contracts, which indicate that Turkish employees must give back cash
    from their salaries as well as tax refunds and state retirement funds.

    The Gulen schools are among the nation's largest users of H1B visas,
    used to import foreign workers with technical skills to fill job
    shortages of qualified American workers. Parents have alleged that
    certified, competent American teachers have been replaced at higher
    salaries by uncertified Turkish men who spoke limited English. They
    claim that the schools discriminate against women and non-Turkish
    teachers and that Gulen teachers receive preferential treatment.

    Clearly, the United States should not be using taxpayer dollars to
    fund a network of charter schools engaged in a kind of "education
    jihad" in America. The movement is bolstered by the deception of
    providing a purely secular quality education lacking in America and
    mostly favorable reports like the recent 60 Minutes segment, but
    American students and their parents should not be partners in an
    enterprise that serves the Gulen Movement's ideological and strategic
    goals to indoctrinate and Islamicize Americans.

    By Janet Levy
    American Thinker

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