November 21, 2010

Towards ‘the conference-i kamil’ (2)

İhsan Yılmaz

Gulen Conference
Int. Gulen Conference in Chicago
Last week I started writing about the International Conference on the Gülen Movement held in Chicago, titled “The Gülen Movement: Paradigms, Projects and Aspirations,” and promised to continue this week.

On the second day of the conference, the first panel was titled “Sociological Approaches to the Hizmet Movement” and the speakers were Suveyda Karakaya of the University of Tennessee, Gökhan Bacık of Zirve University, and Muhammed Çetin of East Stroudsburg University.

Karakaya’s paper “Women in the Hizmet Movement: Traditionalists or Modernists?” examines the attitudes of 250 women affiliates from diverse backgrounds -- residing in Turkey and the US -- regarding controversial issues such as women’s access to higher education and employment, dress styles (including the headscarf) and their roles in the movement.

She concludes that these women cannot be classified as wholly traditionalist or modernist. Furthermore, she claims that rather than religion, educational background is the decisive element for determining if a woman is more traditionalist or modernist.

Bacık’s paper is titled “Islamic Movements and Amodern Networks.” This study of the Gülen movement details how new faith-based movements operate in daily life and how they activate traditional informal networks. Bacık argues that the micro-universe offered by the Gülen movement is an important sample in analyzing how new faith-based movements develop their mobilization strategies over daily life. Unlike Islamist movements, the agency of change is not government but daily life. The movement also displays an irregular position towards modernity and in this sense it is neither modern nor anti-modern, but “amodern.” The employment of traditional networks in daily life has released the movement from the burden of modernity. Being indifferent to the state and operating through daily life, the movement has gained a potential for connecting with the historical Islam that has its roots in pre-modernity.

Çetin talked about the civic engagement element of the movement, as well as its efficacy and success.

In the second panel of the day, titled “Modern Social Paradigms and the Hizmet Movement,” the speakers were Simon Robinson of Leeds Metropolitan University, Leonid Sykiainen of the State Scientific University of Russia and Jeremy Walton of New York University. Robinson gave a presentation on multiculturalism and the ethics of diversity in Gülen’s thought. Robinson argues that in stressing universal responsibility and stewardship Gülen provides much firmer psychological and ethical, as well as theoretical and practical, bases for multiculturalism and ethics of diversity than either human rights or the rule of law. Sykiainen discussed the role of Gülen’s ideas for the Muslim world and their potential impact on democratic reforms. He argues that Gülen’s ideas are important for using the positive results of globalization and avoiding its negative impacts on the Muslim world in the light of different positions of modern Islamic legal and political thought. The title of Walton’s paper is “Toward a Comprehensive Interpretation of Piety and Civility: Theological, Ethical, Institutional and Aesthetic Dimensions of the Hizmet Movement.” He argues that the theological and social aspects of the movement should not be analytically separated, as they inform each other and therefore demand a synthetic and comprehensive approach.

The third panel was titled “The Hizmet Movement in Local Context.” Daniele Cantini’s paper studies the movement in an Italian city, Modena, and looks at its projects, aspirations and challenges in this local context. Hasan Aydın and Susan Chandler’s paper is a qualitative field study of the movement in Abuja, Nigeria. The last paper of the conference, which discussed the movement’s activities in northern Iraq, was presented by Martha Ann Kirk. The conference wrap up was done by two prominent academics -- Marcia Hermansen and Scott Alexander -- the latter of whom said that he is neither Turkish nor Muslim but still a member of the movement.

The organization and logistics of the conference was very much in the Gülen style and was therefore excellent, similar to previous conferences. A major concept of the movement is “insani-ı kamil” (the perfect human) and its greater jihad (struggle) is to constantly try to reach this utopian stage. In terms of the academic quality of the papers, this Chicago conference was one step ahead of the previous conferences, showing that the participants of the movement and the conferences are getting better and better, striving towards “the conference-ı kamil” (the perfect conference).

Published on Today's Zaman, 21 November 2010, Sunday

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