Progress Ohio reports that the many thousands of secret government cables released by Wikileaks contained references to the Gulen charter schools, a number of which are being investigated by the FBI for unknown reasons. The Gulen charter chain is the largest in the nation.
State Dept. Notified CIA, National Security Council About Suspicious Charter School Visas
The U.S. State Department raised serious and repeated concerns about Turkish charter schools in America, sending cables to the CIA, Secretary of Defense and the President’s National Security Council. Special attention was paid to the large number of Turkish nationals with questionable credentials seeking visas to teach at schools such as Ohio’s Horizon Science Academies, which are linked to a controversial Islamic faith leader.
A review of over one hundred diplomatic cables made available at WikiLeaks found numerous warnings about underqualified applicants for teaching visas. One cable states that applicants “might be using the reputation of the school as a cover to get to the US.” Another, ominously observed there is “considerable debate” about whether members of their faith movement were “a threat to secular governments.”
Background
Fethullah Gulen is an exiled Muslim cleric living in Pennsylvania. He is currently the subject of an extradition request[1] on charges of espionage and attempting to overthrow the Turkish government.[2] Gulen has millions of well-organized followers in central Asia and his organization is said to have “some of the characteristics of a cult.”[3] Gulen’s followers founded and administer a number of charter schools, including Ohio’s Horizon Science & Noble Academies.
These schools import the majority of their administration staff and many of their teachers on work visas from Turkey and neighboring countries. Secret diplomatic cables show that the “evasiveness” of the applicants and their “uneven at best” qualifications left State Department employees “uneasy.”They voiced these concerns to the top levels of government and even suggested the Department of Homeland Security should investigate the schools.
Memos Back Ohio Teacher Testimonies
Teachers who had worked at Dayton’s Horizon Science Academy made headlines last month when they told the state school board about apparent test tampering, attendance padding, Turish teachers who could barely speak English and even an incident when parents were not told their adolescent children were caught having oral sex at a school function.
Many of the teachers’ observations are supported by the cables. In one memo, the US consulate observed Turkish visa applicants with an “inability to speak English” and a “lack of understanding of basic math concepts (when they were going to teach math or science subjects).”
In another memo, federal officials note that Gulen schools in Turkmenistan can only employ teachers who are “fully qualified in the field.’’ Teachers employed by traditional public schools in Ohio must have a college degree and teach in the area or grade level in which they are licensed. Ohio charter schools, however, are exempt from that requirement
This led ProgressOhio Executive Director Brian Rothenberg to ask, “Why are Ohio charter schools not required to employ only qualified teachers?Taxpayers should be outraged these schools are hiring teachers who aren’t even qualified to teach in their home countries.”
Rothenberg continued, “America’s top intelligence and diplomatic personnel confirmed what a panel of Ohio teachers told the state board of education: Many of the teachers and administrators at these schools are unqualified, and students and taxpayers are suffering because of it. The only entity that doesn’t seem to understand the severity of the problem is the state school board.’’
Excerpts from Secret Cables
Over a quarter million previously secret diplomatic cables were published by WikiLeaks. ProgressOhio review approximately one hundred of them referencing Fethullah Gulen and found the following:
“There is considerable debate whether the Gulen movement represents a threat to secular governments. Skeptics argue the Gulenists seek to transform societies from the inside-out by developing sympathetic elites in a country’s government and business circles. […] Gulenists’ penchant for secrecy raises questions. For example, Gulenists seeking U.S. visas at the Embassy often are evasive about their religious views and their work-related duties in the U.S. (NOTE: Many U.S. visa applicants at the Embassy seek to work at Gulenist-linked schools in the U.S.)”[4]
“…there are concerns that Gulenist charter schools in the U.S. are capitalizing on the local successes to petition for visas for marginally qualified temporary workers.”[5]
“While on the surface a benign humanitarian movement, the ubiquitous evasiveness of Gulenist applicants — coupled with what appears to be adeliberate management of applicant profiles over the past several years — leaves Consular officers uneasy, an uneasiness echoed within Turkey by those familiar with the Gulenists.”[6]
[I]n summer/fall of 2008, the consular section received a number of visa applications for highly-skilled temporary workers (H1B) to go teach in charter schools in the U.S. The applicants all had in common a tie to a Gulenist school, either in Turkey or in Turkmenistan. Their qualifications were uneven at best. Some were bona fide teachers with several years of experience and advanced degrees. Others claimed teaching experience by assisting, volunteering, or substituting at a Gulenist school (language center or high school) in Turkmenistan. These minimally-qualified applicants prompted further investigation, and it turns out that the charter schools in the U.S. are also part of the broader Gulenist movement. The minimally-qualified applicants, petitions were returned to DHS for revocation based on a lack of qualifications, such as theirinability to speak English, possession of degrees not related to the subjects that they intended to teach and further lack of understanding of basic math concepts (when they were going to teach math or science subjects).[7]
On the other hand, we are concerned by the link with charter schools in the U.S. that have petitioned for marginally-qualified H1B candidates … These applicants were simply not convincing…might be using the reputation of the school as a cover to get to the [United States]. Post, after discussions with others in the region that see similar applicants, recommends that these H1B candidates receive a high degree of scrutiny before any visas are approved…. Further, Consular Affairs, Fraud Prevention might, in concert with the Department of Homeland Security, wish to investigate or audit these Turkish-run charter schools in the U.S. for compliance with U.S. immigration law.[8]

As people in Turkey reject evolution to an even greater extent than people in the US, how do Gulen charter schools handle evolution in biology classes? Do the Gulen charters push Islamic teachings to the degree that this is done in Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox Jewish schools in the US that are publicly supported through vouchers or tax credits? These questions demand answers. — Edd Doerr (arlinc.org)
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This issue is working its way throught the courts as the more general question of public funding, mainly through scholarships and vouchers, to schools of choice, including private and religious schools and the community of home-schoolers.
Unless I am mistaken, the intelligent design case ended with the secular/scientific view of evolution the winner.
A judge in North Carolina recently stopped a voucher program in its tracks–all over the internet.
More information on the status of state laws and regulations can be found at http://www.ncsl.org/research/education/voucher-law-comparison.aspx
This is certain to become a matter for the Supremes,
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I don’t think the Supreme Court will untangle it. There is so much faith-based contracting going on now that the division between “public” and “private” is all but gone.
I think it was a mistake for religious groups. They’ll lose any legitimate “outsider” status they had, and that was the source of a lot of their moral authority. I have no idea why they would want to become just another government contractor in a long line of people lining up for public funds to run private entities, but they are. I think it’s a loss for them, a real blunder. I hope the public funding was worth it. I don’t know how they’re different than any of the thousands of nonprofits that are all or partly publicly-funded or subsidized. In my opinion, they should have kept their “outsider” status. It had value.
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Here’s an article about conservative Christian creationism advocates from the US traveling to Istanbul in 2007 to attend a conference organized by the Gulen Movement
http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?id=14772
Just so you all know, a complete conversation about the Gulen Movement will be much more involved than some generic conversation about Islam. The Gulen Movement is globally ambitious and revivalistic. Their religious fervor extends to their sense of Turkish nationalism, and also to their own peculiar and grandiose geopolitical goals.
The GM’s efforts were a major factor in the rise of political Islam in Turkey. Beyond Turkey, Gulen’s followers and supporters promote his brand of Turkish Sunni Islam as the ideal type of Islam. Plus there is Gulen’s wider vision: the revival of his beloved homeland of Anatolia as a major world power and the leader for all Turkic Muslim nations (ex-USSR, ex-Ottoman Empire lands).
The Gulenist utopia is “A New World” united by the Turkish language and a mutual affection for Anatolia (search “Yeni Bir Dunya” on YouTube). Paving the way for this future is why the Gulen Movement’s organizations (including its charter schools) always offer Turkish cultural and language instruction, guided trips to Turkey, etc.
Once you understand that the movement has been in the midst of a slow, soft sell of Gulen’s vision to as many global targets as possible, you will understand 1. why they put so much money and energy into making “friends” with powerful and influential public officials and other VIPs (=sympathizer recruitment); 2. why they are fixated on – and are supreme experts at – their own public relations; and 3. why they kept their focus on the development of schools, businesses, media outlets, and outreach “interfaith” / “intercultural” organizations. The movement is famous for its secrecy and strategic ambiguity, which is how they’ve been able to fly so far for so long under most Americans’ radar.
Check out this newly published profile about Fethullah Gulen and the Gulen Movement by Joshua Hendrick (the leading US academic expert):
http://www.has.vcu.edu/wrs/profiles/FethullahGulen.htm
Esp. pay attention to the part about Gulen’s “golden generation” and “generation of hope” and “army of light” and “soldiers of truth.”
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I can answer that. They don’t care about American children and will teach what is required for the bare minimum cost. There is a $1:3 dollar purchasing power which favors the Turkey. Turkish people here are paid like a doctor would be paid in their own country. The are also expected to return back 30% to 40% to their backers/ charities/ religious affiliations when they return home. It is often young people that come over who soon marry and have an American born child or two before returning to their Turkish community in their home land. That way they always have a reason to return or to stay in the US.
Also the charters schools are only interested in children they can turn a profit on so you can expect SpEd children who require a lot of services to be frustrated out of school choice since special education is poorly funded in the first place. There is most likely a lot of fraud going on with charters in general since most produce no better result then public schools. However, the Turkish run charter schools do seem to take fraud to a whole new level. It’s here to stay too since now they have a strong lobby and often give donations to politicians and allow politician’s to speak at school events to parents. So al that can be done is to fight for further regulations and educating parents on the realities of school choice.
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This is an industry not limited to Gulan. Take a look at
http://www.myvisajobs.com/Visa-Sponsor/Charter-Schools-Usa/105882.htm
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I would not trust today’s Supremes to settle this, given their mistaken ruling years ago in the Ohio Zelman case. We voters must settle this, noting that large majorities of Democrats and Independents oppose tax aid to faith-based private schools while 52% of GOPers support such misuse of public funds.
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The Gulen charter story is fascinating, because it has everything.
Captured politicians, ed reform, foreign policy, the intersect between what’s going on in Turkey and the Gulen movement, preferential immigration policy for certain people, the church and state issue and US cultural norms regarding hiring women and Gulen norms on those issues, government contracting and how complex and impossible that is to regulate, “buy and hire American” and how politicians like to repeat that but don’t mean it all…it would be a great story.
Instead of yet another “public schools suck!” book or story, I wish someone would write that one. I’d read it.
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Develop your fine list into an outline, Chiara, and you’ve got an important book proposal.
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There is one book out it is a few years old but it gets into the mindset of Gulen Members. Many of them were separated from family at an early age and lived in boarding schools called “Lighthouses” in Turkey. They live and breath “Gulen” or they call him Fetos or Hocaefendi. The book is called “Tactics of Islam” the Fethullah Gulen Missionaries in America” by Dr. Aland Mizell.
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Indeed, the Gulen story has everything:
http://takimag.com/article/the_shadowy_imam_of_the_poconos_steve_sailer/print#axzz3Bq4m2glC
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Perhaps we should give credit to where is due. Julian Assange?
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I agree with Ken.
Wikileaks also provided the basis for Truthout’s report on the shadow organization operating along side GATS. The secret organization of multinational corporations, is attempting to hamstring the American people through international agreements that force globalization of services, like education and financial services.
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