Islamist Gülen Movement Runs U.S. Charter Schools

*by Stephen Schwartz
American 
Thinker<http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/islamist_guelen_movement_runs.html>
March 29, 2010*

*
http://www.islamist-watch.org/3549/islamist-gulen-movement-runs-us-charter-schools
*

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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 Gülen, who directs a major Islamist
movement in Turkey and the Turkish diaspora, but lives in the United States.
He is number 13 among the world's "50 most influential Muslims" according
to one prominent
listing<http://www.rissc.jo/index.php/english-publications.html>
.

Gülen has been 
criticized<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/02/25/whats_really_behind_turkeys_coup_arrests>
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 Gülen 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 Gülen'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<http://www.meforum.org/2045/fethullah-gulens-grand-ambition>
.

But in startling news for Americans, the Gülen movement operates more than
85 primary and secondary schools on our soil. A roster of the Gülen schools
and of the numerous foundations that support
them<http://www.actforamerica.org/index.php/learn/email-archives/1069-fethulla-gulen-infiltrating-us-through-our-charter-schools/>
has
been released to the public by the patriotic group Act! for America. The
Gülen 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 Gülen charter schools are Arizona and Utah. In the
former, the Daisy Education Corporation (the Gülen 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 Gülen charter schools in Tucson has produced critical
attention in local media. The *Tucson Weekly*
published<http://www.tucsonweekly.com/tucson/hidden-agenda/content?oid=1694764>
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 Gülen 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. … She says several Sonoran Academy parents believe the
school has a hidden agenda to promote Gülen'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<http://www.sltrib.com/education/ci_12855515> 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 Gülen."

But while Fatih Karatas, principal of the Sonoran Science Academy middle
school in Tucson, flatly denied any connection with the Gülen 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 Gülen'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 emailed other parents
about Gülen 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 Gülen 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 <http://www.islamicpluralism.org/> in Washington, D.C.*

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