Front cover image for The house of service : the Gülen movement and Islam's third way

The house of service : the Gülen movement and Islam's third way

David Tittensor offers a groundbreaking new perspective on the Gülen movement, a Turkish Muslim educational activist network that emerged in the 1960s and has grown into a global empire with an estimated worth of $25 billion. Named after its leader Fethullah Gülen, the movement has established more than 1,000 secular educational institutions in over 140 countries, aiming to provide holistic education that incorporates both spirituality and the secular sciences. Despite the movement's success, little is known about how its schools are run, or how Islam is operationalized. Drawing on thirteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in Turkey, Tittensor explores the movement's ideo-theology and how it is practiced in the schools. His interviews with both teachers and graduates from Africa, Indonesia, Central Asia, and Turkey show that the movement is a missionary organization, but of a singular kind: its goal is not simply widespread religious conversion, but a quest to recoup those Muslims who have apparently lost their way and to show non-Muslims that Muslims can embrace modernity and integrate into the wider community. Tittensor also examines the movement's operational side and shows how the schools represent an example of Mohammad Yunus's social business model: a business with a social cause at its heart. The House of Service is an insightful exploration of one of the world's largest transnational Muslim associations, and will be invaluable for those seeking to understand how Islam will be perceived and practiced in the future
Print Book, English, 2014
Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2014
xiv, 248 pages ; 25 cm.
9780199336418, 0199336415
855909962
The Gülen movement in context. Islam in Turkey: continuities in spite of change
All is not what it seems: a critical appraisal of modern Turkey
The development of a vision
The Gülen movement in practice. Voices from within, voices from without: movement teachers and students speak for themselves
Divergence between the mission and the message: interrogation of a double standard
Placing the Gülen movement in the global order: the need for a new typology
A singular movement with a modern day mission
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