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ANCA Desk: Combatting The Gulen Movement In Lancaster

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  • ANCA Desk: Combatting The Gulen Movement In Lancaster

    ANCA DESK: COMBATTING THE GULEN MOVEMENT IN LANCASTER
    By Michelle Hagopian

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/05/03/anca-desk-combatting-the-gulen-movement-in-lancaster/
    May 3, 2013

    This week, I would like to highlight the efforts of a dear friend to
    the Armenian cause, Rev. Susan Minasian, the interfaith chaplain of
    the Franklin & Marshall College who was instrumental in fighting a
    proposal to open a Gulen charter school in Lancaster, Pa.

    Minasian Gulen schools were first introduced and are currently run by
    the Academy of Business and Entrepreneurship Charter School (ABECS),
    a group that follows the teachings of Turkish Islamist Fethullah
    Gulen, also known as the Gulen movement. The Gulen movement is a form
    of Turkish propaganda that has implemented its policies across the
    United States. Gulen, who has been self-exiled in the Poconos region
    since 1998, is the ideological head of the movement.

    The first Gulen school opened in 1999. U.S. officials were made aware
    of the movement's involvement in charter schools in 2006, when they
    noticed a large number of Turkish men seeking visas to work at the
    schools. Board members of the Gulen charter schools are primarily
    Turkish, and the schools' curriculum focuses on math, science,
    and technology, and largely ignores or neglects world history and
    current events.

    The schools have been criticized for importing teachers and for not
    providing a comprehensive view of history, which includes education
    on the Armenian Genocide and Armenian history in general.

    Unfortunately, ABECS has been successful in establishing Turkish-themed
    charter schools in many of the states, and public money received
    from those schools is used to open more charters that push the Gulen
    agenda. As of last year, 135 schools are reportedly in operation
    within 26 states.

    When the proposal to build the school in Lancaster was made, Minasian
    challenged the values of the charter school by speaking out to the
    local Lancaster media and making statements at all of the hearings
    held earlier this year.

    She noted that the opposition to the charter school was not about
    ethnic bias, but about serious concerns regarding those who deny
    genocide and waste taxpayer dollars to incorrectly shape young minds.

    "Just as we would not want Holocaust deniers leading our schools,
    we would not want genocide deniers shaping or leading our educational
    institutions," she said at one meeting.

    "It doesn't matter where you live, you can be an advocate for justice,"
    she told me. "One voice can teach many people. I don't worry that
    there are only 15 other Armenians around me in Lancaster, and I don't
    use that as an excuse in my spiritual journey toward justice."

    The School District of Lancaster ultimately rejected the proposal
    last month. The 8-0 vote, with 1 abstention, ended the months-long
    debate over the merits of the school, which would have opened this
    fall. In addition, several letters of support from legislators have
    been rescinded, in most cases because they were signed by low-level
    staff and executives who didn't know they were officially backing
    the ABECS proposal.

    Minasian is extremely humble and insisted she didn't do this on her
    own. She emphasized the importance of her network in Lancaster, who
    defended justice by calling out the charter school's curriculum. She
    credits fellow Lancaster residents and colleagues for taking a stand
    against the ABECS proposal. Minasian works consistently to find allies
    who care about Armenian Genocide recognition.

    Her story is inspiring not because it's unusual, but because she is
    so motivated to create change even with just one voice.

    People like Minasian who stand up for what's right embody what
    grassroots activism is all about. I believe Minasian's attitude is
    one we should seek to duplicate all over the ANCA Eastern Region On
    behalf of the ANCA-ER and Armenians everywhere, I want to thank her
    for being entrenched in a lengthy battle to fight the Gulen movement
    from taking root in Lancaster.

    With more positive outcomes like this, the sky's the limit on what we
    can collectively or individually achieve. Each victory is a victory
    for all Armenians.

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