Role of Sufi Islam in countering Turkish
coup
By
Dr Ghayur Ayub
Many
reasons, some genuine others not genuine, are given as to why Turkish military
coup failed. I have my own. This is in addition to the reasons that; 1) Erdogan
showed his political strength by putting Turkish economy on the road to
progress; 2) He helped Turkey to keep national pride in post 9/11 global
politics; 3) He let the army realise that in democracy, military honour does
not reside in political corridors; 4) He sent a message that secularism does
not go well with Muslim public in a Muslim country. It is the last point which
has been less scrutinised by the analysts analysing the failed coup.
The
question is why Erdagon, despite corruption allegations, got public support? We
don't see that for Pakistani politicians. The answer lies in the Sufi teachings
he follows. We have seen a glaring example of this when Imran Khan and Tahir ul
Qadri took part in the famous Dharna of 2014. The youth followed IK because he
wanted a change of the government. Using his charismatic oration supported with
musical tunes he argued why a change was necessary. In the following weeks, we
saw his convincing power start to crumble as he kept on repeating the same
theme again and again. Repetition works in Zikre not otherwise. The gathering
got thinner and in the end, it looked like a musical show where the youth came
out to have a good time in a city where the streets are dead after sunset.
It
was different type of gathering on Tahirul ul Qadri’s side. His audience was
not high society youth. Though, he called them PAT workers but in reality they
were the followers of Minhaj ul Quran, adhering to a specific Sufi order based
on special relationship between master and disciple. When TUQ called them to
join him in the long march, they followed him blindly knowing the suffering
they would face. In such relationship, when the master asks them to jump from
the roof they would do so without hesitation. This commitment became obvious
when they refused enormous amount of blood money. When Tahir ul Qadri decided
to end Dharna, they packed their bags and went back without blinking their
eyes. This is called disciple's commitment in Sufism.
It
was this commitment which played essential role in unsuccessful Turkish coup.
To understand that, we have to go back into the history of Turkish society
where Sufi Islam is in abundance. It is the Naqshbandi order with its sub
branches which has overwhelming followings.
Sufi orders are known for their esoteric nature in contrast
to orthodox Islam. Naqshbandi order differs from other orders for its
compatibility with orthodox Islam. This is because of the seventeenth century
theosophist Sheikh Ahmad al-Sirhindi, who brought orthodoxy in the order while
keeping ijtihad (independent
reasoning) within the bounds of the Quran and Sunna. In doing so, he introduced
politics in Sufism to oppose Shaism. In the Nineteenth
century, this thinking was picked up by Khalid-i-Baghdadi, a Naqshbadi
sheikh of Kurdish descent. He developed the Khalidi branch and soon this branch
started to flourish in the Ottoman Empire infiltrating its bureaucracy.
After the fall of Ottoman Empire, the secular Kemal Ata
Turk did not spare Sufi Dargahs and shut them down along with the religious
Maddaris. As a result, some Sufis went underground and others went abroad and
ended in Islamic centres in Cairo, Baghdad, Damascus and Medina. There, they
were exposed to Salafi thinking and the ideology of Hasan al-Banna and Sayyid
Qutb of the Muslim Brotherhood. During their learning, they found close
theosophist links between Naqshbandi-Khalidi Sufi order and orthodox orders of
Salafi and Muslim Brotherhood. After the emergence of democracy in Turkey from
1950 onwards, they returned and reimported the religious education they studied
abroad and started mixing it with Naqshbandi-Khalidi order and spreading it as
political tool.
The
main credit goes to Mehmet Zahid Kotku (1897-1980), a son of migrants from
Daghestan. He was initiated into the Khalidi order in 1918 and became a sheikh
in 1952 when he took up preaching in Istanbul. In 1958, he took over the
Iskenderpaşa mosque, where he remained until his death in 1980.
He
became the real leader in Turkish politics promoting the Khalidi philosophy in
a multi-party democracy. Initially he involved Necmettin Erbakan to form the
National Order Party in 1969 telling him that “the country has fallen into the
hands of Freemasons imitating the West”. In the following years, he polished
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and taught him how Sufism concentrates on public affairs
by helping common people in their social life, education and health. Erdagon understood
it and made it his political motto.
In
his political career, differences appeared between him and Erbakan, when he
found Erbakan arrogant, strict, unbending and was unwilling to compromise on
political matters. Kotku contained this rift while he was alive. After his
death, his successor Essad Cosan could not maintain the control and migrated to
Australia where he was killed in a car crash in 2001.
While
the rift continued, Erdagon formed AKP to end fragmentation of the religious
orders in 2001. As part of his Sufi-cum-political
expediency, he chose to become ally with another Sufi order of Nurcu group led
by Fethullah Gülen. Unlike, Erdagon, Gulen was more liberal, but he needed him
for political stability. While he was
strengthening his power by following the Sufi instructions and helping the
public at large, he started developing links with Brotherhood organizations. It
became obvious when leading representatives of the various branches of the
Brotherhood, including Hamas, were the honoured guests at AKP conventions. This
bothered Gulen. He parted his ways and went in exile settling in Pennsylvania.
Some people say that Erdagon developed personal relationship with Sharif
brothers for their leanings to centrist Islam. In contrast, he was close to liberal
Gen. Pervez Musharaf as both had links with another Naqshbandi Sufi, Sheikh
Nazim of Cyprus.
The
point I am trying to make is that it was a Sufi path which made Erdagon help
the public in their social life including education and health and which became
a scoring point politically. And, if it was not the messages from the mosques
run by the Sufis on that fateful night, the public would not have come out on
the streets and bare handedly stop the most powerful army or would not have
laid down in front of tanks.
The end
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