Millî Görüş
Millî Görüş, or National Vision, is a Turkish Islamist religiopolitical movement founded by Necmettin Erbakan in 1969, centered on integrating Islamic moral and economic principles into governance to foster national self-sufficiency, heavy industrialization, and pan-Islamic solidarity while critiquing Western secularism and dependency.[1][2] The ideology, articulated in Erbakan's manifesto, emphasizes a "just order" (adil düzen) derived from Quranic injunctions, rejecting usury-based capitalism and socialism in favor of interest-free banking, resource-sharing cooperatives, and strategic autonomy from institutions like NATO and the IMF.[3][4] Through successive parties such as the National Salvation Party (1972–1980), Welfare Party (1983–1998), and its successors like the Felicity Party, the movement gained prominence by mobilizing conservative voters disillusioned with secular elites, achieving electoral breakthroughs including control of major municipalities in 1994 and forming a coalition government in 1996 that installed Erbakan as Turkey's first Islamist prime minister.[5][1] Erbakan's administration pursued foreign policy shifts toward Muslim-majority states, advocating the D-8 framework for Islamic economic cooperation as an alternative to Western alliances, though it faced domestic opposition leading to its ouster via a military memorandum in 1997.[4][2] While influencing the broader Islamist spectrum—including the origins of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) before a ideological divergence—Millî Görüş has encountered recurrent closures by Turkey's Constitutional Court for anti-secular activities and drawn scrutiny abroad for diaspora affiliates like Germany's IGMG, accused of fostering parallel Islamist structures resistant to integration.[6][7]Origins and Historical Context
Founding and Early Influences
The Millî Görüş movement originated in 1969 when Necmettin Erbakan, newly elected as an independent deputy from Konya, published a manifesto titled Millî Görüş, which served as the ideological blueprint for the initiative.[8] This document promoted a synthesis of Turkish nationalism with Islamic governance principles, positioning the movement as a counter to the dominant secular establishment.[1] Erbakan's entry into politics marked the formal inception, building on his prior engineering career and exposure to industrial development ideas during studies in Germany, though the core focus shifted to religiopolitical reform.[8] Early influences stemmed from dissatisfaction with Turkey's Kemalist secularism, which had suppressed Islamist expressions since the republic's founding in 1923, fostering a desire to revive Islamic political agency.[1] The movement adopted a gradualist strategy inspired by the Muslim Brotherhood's model of societal Islamization through education and preaching (dawa), rather than immediate revolution, targeting rural conservatives and urban migrants alienated by Western-oriented modernization.[8] [1] Ideologically, it drew on pan-Islamist visions and a romanticized view of early Islamic history under the caliphates, advocating replacement of secular laws with Sharia-derived systems while rejecting Western alliances like NATO.[1][9] These foundations enabled the rapid formation of the National Order Party (Milli Nizam Partisi) in 1970 as the movement's first political outlet, which emphasized heavy industry under Islamic ethics and anti-Zionist foreign policy stances.[10] The party's closure by military intervention in 1971 on anti-secular grounds underscored early tensions with the state, yet reinforced Millî Görüş's commitment to resilient grassroots organization.[10]Necmettin Erbakan's Role in Inception
Necmettin Erbakan, a mechanical engineer and professor at Istanbul Technical University, initiated the Millî Görüş movement in 1969 amid dissatisfaction with Turkey's secular political establishment. Having gained prominence through his industrial ventures, including founding Gümüş Motor Inc. in 1956, Erbakan entered politics as an independent candidate in the March 1969 Erzurum by-election, securing victory and forming the Bağımsızlar Hareketi (Independents Movement). This platform articulated his vision of a "National View" emphasizing Islamic principles, economic independence, and opposition to Western influence, formalized through a manifesto that outlined core ideological tenets.[1][2] Erbakan's role crystallized with the establishment of the Milli Nizam Partisi (National Order Party, MNP) on January 26, 1970, as the first institutional embodiment of Millî Görüş. Founded with 17 colleagues, the MNP sought to represent Anatolian small capital owners and advocate for a "Just Order" economic model rooted in Islamic ethics, challenging the dominance of Kemalist secularism and pro-Western policies. Erbakan served as its leader, positioning the party to institutionalize the movement's anti-imperialist and pan-Islamist stance, though it faced immediate scrutiny for perceived threats to secularism.[10][5] The MNP's brief existence ended with its closure by the 1971 military memorandum on May 20, 1971, on grounds of anti-secular activities, underscoring Erbakan's foundational influence in galvanizing Islamist opposition. This closure did not dismantle the movement; rather, it reinforced Erbakan's commitment, leading to subsequent parties that perpetuated Millî Görüş principles. His engineering background and emphasis on self-reliance informed the ideology's focus on technological and economic sovereignty, distinguishing it from purely clerical approaches.[10][8]Initial Political Formations
The initial political formations of Millî Görüş emerged through the establishment of parties led by Necmettin Erbakan, marking the movement's entry into formal Turkish politics. Erbakan founded the National Order Party (Milli Nizam Partisi, MNP) on January 26, 1970, with a group of 17 associates, aiming to institutionalize the Millî Görüş ideology of Islamic-oriented nationalism and economic independence.[10] The MNP represented the first explicit political vehicle for Millî Görüş principles, emphasizing anti-Western sentiments and a "just order" based on Islamic values, though it operated within Turkey's secular framework.[8] The MNP's activities were short-lived due to its perceived challenge to secularism. Following the March 12, 1971, military memorandum that pressured the government to resign, the Constitutional Court banned the party on May 20, 1971, on grounds of promoting an anti-secular agenda and violating the principle of laicism enshrined in the Turkish constitution.[11] This closure highlighted early tensions between Millî Görüş's Islamist leanings and the Kemalist establishment's commitment to secular governance.[8] In response, Erbakan reorganized supporters into the National Salvation Party (Milli Selamet Partisi, MSP) on October 11, 1972, as a direct successor to the MNP.[10] The MSP retained core Millî Görüş tenets, including advocacy for moral order, heavy industry development, and pan-Islamic cooperation, while navigating legal constraints by framing its platform in nationalist terms.[12] This formation solidified Millî Görüş as a persistent political force, enabling participation in coalition governments during the 1970s despite ongoing scrutiny from secular authorities.[13]Ideology and Core Principles
Anti-Western and Pan-Islamist Stance
Millî Görüş ideology fundamentally opposes Western influence, viewing it as a form of cultural and economic imperialism that undermines Islamic sovereignty. Necmettin Erbakan, the movement's founder, articulated this stance in his 1975 book Milli Görüş, where he criticized Western capitalism and alliances like NATO and the European Economic Community as tools of exploitation designed to perpetuate dependency on non-Muslim powers.[9] [14] Erbakan advocated for Turkey's economic self-sufficiency through heavy industry and rejected interest-based finance as un-Islamic, positioning the West as an adversary to authentic Muslim development.[15] [16] This anti-Western orientation extended to foreign policy, exemplified by Erbakan's establishment of the Developing Eight (D-8) organization on June 15, 1997, comprising Muslim-majority countries including Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, Egypt, Nigeria, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Bangladesh, as an alternative to Western-dominated institutions like the IMF and WTO.[9] The D-8 aimed to foster intra-Islamic trade and cooperation free from Western interference, reflecting Millî Görüş's belief in a multipolar world order centered on Islamic unity rather than alignment with Europe or the United States.[17] Erbakan's rhetoric often framed the West, particularly through the lens of Zionism, as orchestrating global conflicts to suppress Muslim progress, drawing on conspiracy-laden interpretations of history.[17] Complementing its anti-Western posture, Millî Görüş embraces pan-Islamism as a counter-ideology, promoting the political and economic unification of the Muslim world under shared Islamic principles to restore caliphate-like solidarity without explicit revivalism. Erbakan envisioned Turkey as a leadership hub in this union, leveraging its strategic position to challenge secular nation-states and Western secularism, which he deemed incompatible with divine governance.[9] [5] This pan-Islamist vision prioritized solidarity with Muslim nations over Turkish nationalism, critiquing the latter as a Western import serving external interests.[18] While early expressions were fervent, publications associated with the movement moderated anti-Western rhetoric by the late 1980s to broaden appeal, yet the core rejection of Western hegemony and emphasis on Islamic bloc formation persisted.[5]Just Order Economic Model
The Just Order (Turkish: Adil Düzen), developed by Necmettin Erbakan in the 1990s, constitutes the economic pillar of Millî Görüş ideology, framing an Islamic-based system as a "third way" distinct from both capitalism and socialism.[19][20] Erbakan positioned it as a response to perceived injustices in Western-dominated capitalism, which he criticized for fostering exploitation through interest (riba) and monopolies, and Soviet-style socialism, which he viewed as atheistic state coercion suppressing individual initiative.[21][22] The model draws from Quranic principles of justice (adl) and mutual partnership (ortaklık), advocating for an economy where production and consumption align with ethical distribution to eliminate poverty and inequality without class conflict.[23][24] Central to the Just Order is the prohibition of interest-based finance, replaced by profit-and-loss sharing mechanisms in banking and investment, intended to prevent debt cycles and promote risk-sharing equity.[19][25] Erbakan proposed a partnership economy (Ortaklık Ekonomisi) emphasizing cooperative enterprises, where workers and owners share profits proportionally to contributions, contrasting capitalist wage labor with socialist collectivization.[23][22] The state plays an active role in fostering heavy industrialization—targeting sectors like machinery, defense, and energy for self-sufficiency—while encouraging private entrepreneurship free from foreign dominance, as evidenced in Erbakan's 1991 manifesto Adil Ekonomik Düzen.[26][27] This approach critiques global economic dependency on institutions like the IMF, advocating instead for intra-Islamic trade blocs and resource pooling to achieve balanced growth.[2][20] Implementation efforts under Erbakan's brief 1996-1997 premiership included initiatives for interest-free public projects and cooperative housing, though constrained by coalition dynamics and subsequent political bans on successor parties.[2][25] Simulations of the model, as outlined in Erbakan's writings, project higher productivity through ethical incentives, with empirical claims of reduced unemployment via localized production councils, though critics from neoliberal perspectives argue it risks inefficiency without market competition.[23][21] In Millî Görüş rhetoric, the Just Order extends beyond economics to social welfare, mandating zakat-like redistribution and prohibiting luxury consumption to ensure basic needs—food, shelter, education—are met as rights, differentiating it from welfare states reliant on taxation rather than communal obligation.[24][27]Social and Cultural Conservatism
Millî Görüş advocates for a social order rooted in Islamic principles, positioning religion as a comprehensive framework for individual conduct and communal life rather than a private affair. This perspective, articulated by Necmettin Erbakan, holds that Islam must permeate all spheres of society to establish justice and moral integrity, rejecting secular models that deviate from Sharia-derived norms.[17][6] The movement critiques Western influences as corrosive to traditional values, favoring instead a "national" (Islamic-infused) social structure that prioritizes piety, discipline, and communal solidarity over individualism.[28] Central to this conservatism is the elevation of the family as society's foundational unit, with policies encouraging higher birth rates and robust familial roles aligned with Islamic teachings. Erbakan's National Order Party, the precursor to later Millî Görüş formations, laid groundwork for pro-natalist positions by framing population growth as essential to Islamic strength and national resilience, a stance echoed in successor ideologies.[29] Gender roles emphasize complementary responsibilities, with women encouraged toward domestic and maternal duties alongside opportunities for participation in public life under modest Islamic guidelines, reflecting Naqshbandi influences on sobriety, modesty, and hierarchical family dynamics inherited by the movement.[30] Culturally, Millî Görüş opposes practices deemed incompatible with Islamic ethics, such as alcohol consumption and secular entertainments that erode moral fabric, promoting instead education systems integrating religious instruction to foster ethical citizens. This extends to diaspora communities, where organizations like the Islamic Community Millî Görüş in Europe reinforce conservative practices—such as mosque-based moral guidance and resistance to assimilation into liberal norms—to preserve Turkish-Islamic identity amid host-society pressures.[1] The movement's authoritarian-leaning hierarchy prioritizes religious authority over pluralistic experimentation, viewing such conservatism as a bulwark against cultural decay and a means to revive ummah cohesion.[31]Key Figures and Leadership
Necmettin Erbakan's Contributions and Legacy
Necmettin Erbakan founded the Millî Görüş movement in 1969, establishing it as a political ideology aimed at fostering an independent Turkey grounded in Islamic principles, heavy industry, and self-sufficiency rather than Western-aligned capitalism or socialism.[1] In 1970, he institutionalized this vision by creating the National Order Party (Milli Nizam Partisi), the first political formation explicitly based on Millî Görüş tenets, which emphasized a "national view" prioritizing moral and spiritual values alongside economic autonomy.[32] The party's closure by Turkish authorities in 1971 on anti-secular grounds did not deter Erbakan; he subsequently led successor parties like the National Salvation Party (1972–1980), which achieved notable electoral success, securing 11.4% of the vote in 1973 and entering coalition governments.[10] Erbakan's core contribution was articulating the "Just Order" (Adil Düzen) economic model within Millî Görüş, which advocated interest-free finance, state-supported industrialization, and resource pooling to eliminate exploitation and promote equitable distribution, drawing from Islamic jurisprudence while critiquing usury-based systems.[6] As leader of the Welfare Party (Refah Partisi) from 1983, he propelled Millî Görüş into mainstream politics, culminating in his tenure as prime minister from June 1996 to June 1997, during which he initiated the Developing Eight (D-8) organization on October 15, 1997, to enhance economic cooperation among Muslim-majority countries as an alternative to Western-dominated forums.[16] His governments also pursued infrastructure projects, including factories and dams, aligning with Millî Görüş goals of technological sovereignty.[2] Erbakan's legacy endures through Millî Görüş's influence on Turkish Islamist politics, where he is regarded as the pioneer of democratic political Islam, mentoring figures who later formed parties like the Felicity Party (Saadet Partisi) after the Welfare Party's 1998 ban.[33] Although a faction led by Recep Tayyip Erdoğan splintered to form the Justice and Development Party (AKP) in 2001, diverging toward pragmatic conservatism, Erbakan's insistence on pan-Islamism and anti-Western rhetoric shaped the movement's foundational critique of secular Kemalist establishments.[34] Posthumously, following his death on August 27, 2011, he is credited by adherents with moderating Islamist impulses toward electoral legitimacy rather than radicalism, though secular critics viewed his platforms as threats to Turkey's laïcité.[35] Millî Görüş organizations in Europe, such as Germany's Islamic Community Millî Görüş (ICMG), continue propagating his teachings, maintaining transnational networks among Turkish diaspora communities.[1]Successors and Factional Leaders
Recai Kutan succeeded Necmettin Erbakan as leader of the Virtue Party (FP), the direct successor to the banned Welfare Party, assuming the chairmanship in 1997 following Erbakan's ouster amid the 1997 military memorandum.[36] Kutan, a longtime Milli Görüş associate and former minister under Erbakan's coalitions, guided the FP through the 1999 elections where it secured 15.4% of the vote, but the party was dissolved by the Constitutional Court in 2001 for anti-secular activities.[37] The FP's closure precipitated a major factional split within Milli Görüş: reformist elements, including Abdullah Gül and later Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, broke away to form the Justice and Development Party (AKP) in August 2001, adopting a more pragmatic, pro-market stance that diverged from Erbakan's rigid anti-Western pan-Islamism.[38] Traditionalists loyal to Erbakan's vision established the Felicity Party (Saadet Partisi, SP) in July 2001, with Erbakan serving as honorary chairman despite his political ban until 2011.[38] Numan Kurtulmuş, seen as a potential modernizing successor to Erbakan, led SP from October 2008 to October 2010 before resigning over disputes regarding ideological adaptation and party renewal, subsequently aligning with the AKP.[39] Post-Erbakan's death on June 27, 2011, SP leadership passed to Mustafa Kamalak (2010–2016), who emphasized continuity with Milli Görüş orthodoxy, followed by Temel Karamollaoğlu from May 2016 until his announced resignation in May 2024 citing health reasons.[40] A youth-oriented faction emerged in 2018 under Fatih Erbakan, Necmettin's son, who founded the New Welfare Party (Yeniden Refah Partisi) after departing SP, advocating a return to the "Just Order" economic model and criticizing AKP's deviations, garnering 2.8% in the 2023 elections.[36] These factions reflect ongoing tensions between purist adherence to Erbakan's principles and adaptive Islamist governance, with SP maintaining marginal electoral support around 1-2% in recent cycles while the AKP dominates former Milli Görüş voters.[41]Influential Thinkers and Supporters
Mehmet Zahid Kotku (1897–1980), the Naqshbandi sheikh of the İskenderpaşa community in Istanbul, served as a pivotal spiritual mentor to Necmettin Erbakan and profoundly shaped the ideological underpinnings of Millî Görüş through his emphasis on Islamic revivalism, moral discipline, and opposition to secular Western influences. Kotku, who succeeded Mahmut Esad Coşan in leading the Khalidi branch of Naqshbandism, urged Erbakan to form a political party in 1969, viewing political engagement as essential for establishing an Islamic order in Turkey.[42][43] His teachings, rooted in traditional Sufi jurisprudence and anti-imperialist rhetoric, provided the doctrinal framework for Millî Görüş's fusion of spiritual piety with political activism, influencing Erbakan's early writings and the movement's rejection of Kemalist secularism.[36] Beyond Kotku, intellectuals affiliated with conservative Islamist circles contributed to Millî Görüş's intellectual discourse. Rasim Özdenören (born 1940), a prominent writer and essayist, explicitly supported the movement's goals, articulating in his works the need for Muslims to resist Western cultural dominance and revive Islamic economic and social models aligned with Erbakan's "Just Order."[5] Özdenören's essays reinforced Millî Görüş's narrative of Islamic self-sufficiency, drawing on Quranic principles to critique capitalism and socialism alike. Similarly, Sezai Karakoç (1933–2021), a poet and thinker advocating pan-Islamist unity, influenced the movement's foreign policy vision through his writings on resurrecting a caliphate-like Islamic civilization, though he maintained an independent Diriliş Partisi rather than direct organizational involvement.[9] Prominent early supporters included figures like Korkut Özal (1929–2016), an economist and Milli Selamet Partisi parliamentarian who served as a minister in the 1974 CHP-MSP coalition and advocated for Erbakan's industrial self-reliance policies before internal factionalism led to his opposition in the 1978 party congress.[5] The movement also garnered backing from Anatolian conservative industrialists and academics who funded initiatives like heavy industry projects under Erbakan's vision, providing material and intellectual legitimacy against establishment secular elites.[44] These alliances underscored Millî Görüş's appeal to traditionalist networks, though ideological purity was often tested by pragmatic political necessities.Political Evolution in Turkey
Formation and Bans of Successor Parties
The National Salvation Party (Milli Selamet Partisi, MSP) was established on October 11, 1972, by Necmettin Erbakan as the direct successor to the banned National Order Party, continuing the Milli Görüş ideological line amid Turkey's post-1971 military intervention environment.[1] The MSP gained parliamentary representation in the 1973 and 1977 elections, participating in coalition governments, but was dissolved following the September 12, 1980, military coup d'état, which targeted perceived threats to secular order and state unity.[45] In the political reopening after the 1980 coup, Erbakan founded the Welfare Party (Refah Partisi, RP) on July 19, 1983, as the next iteration of Milli Görüş, emphasizing an "Islamic synthesis" while navigating restrictions on overt religious rhetoric.[46] The RP achieved significant electoral success, securing 21.4% of the vote in the 1995 general election and enabling Erbakan to become prime minister in a 1996 coalition. However, the Constitutional Court dissolved the party on January 16, 1998, ruling its program and actions violated Turkey's secular constitutional principles, including calls for sharia-influenced governance and anti-secular alliances.[47] Erbakan and several leaders faced five-year political bans as a result.[48] Anticipating the RP's closure, Milli Görüş members formed the Virtue Party (Fazilet Partisi, FP) in late 1997 as a provisional successor, absorbing RP parliamentarians and maintaining core Islamist positions under leaders like Recai Kutan. The FP performed strongly in 1999 local elections but was itself shut down by the Constitutional Court on June 22, 2001, for similar anti-secular violations, including tolerance of radical Islamist activities and failure to uphold Kemalist principles.[49] This led to a schism: traditionalist Milli Görüş loyalists established the Felicity Party (Saadet Partisi, SP) in July 2001 to preserve Erbakan's uncompromised vision, while reformist figures like Recep Tayyip Erdoğan formed the Justice and Development Party (AKP), which distanced itself from explicit Milli Görüş rhetoric.[50] The SP has operated continuously since without facing dissolution, though it remains marginal electorally.[1]Electoral Achievements and Coalition Governments
The National Salvation Party (MSP), as the initial major political vehicle for Millî Görüş, entered parliament with 48 seats after the October 1973 general election.[10] This result positioned the MSP as a kingmaker in the fragmented assembly, leading to its inclusion in coalition governments. In January 1974, the MSP allied with the Republican People's Party (CHP) under Prime Minister Bülent Ecevit, securing cabinet positions including Erbakan as deputy prime minister responsible for state planning; the government endured until November 1974 amid economic challenges and internal tensions.[51] From March 1975 to June 1977, the MSP joined a coalition with the Justice Party (AP) led by Süleyman Demirel, again placing Erbakan in the deputy prime minister role and granting the MSP influence over key ministries like interior and education.[52] Following the 1980 military intervention that banned the MSP, the movement reconstituted as the Welfare Party (RP). The RP's electoral fortunes improved steadily, peaking in the December 24, 1995 general election when it captured 21.4% of the valid votes and 158 seats in the 550-seat Grand National Assembly, making it the single largest party.[53] This outcome reflected growing grassroots support in urban and conservative rural areas disillusioned with secular establishment parties. In June 1996, the RP-DYP coalition took power, with Erbakan assuming the prime ministership on June 28—the first time an Islamist from the Millî Görüş tradition led Turkey's government—though it collapsed after one year due to military-led secularist opposition and a "post-modern coup" process.[54] [55] [36] The Constitutional Court's dissolution of the RP in January 1998 prompted the formation of the Virtue Party (FP) as successor. In the April 18, 1999 general election, the FP polled 15.4% of the vote, earning 111 seats amid a nationalist surge but falling short of coalition formation as the Democratic Left Party (DSP), Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), and Motherland Party (ANAP) established a governing triad.[56] [57] The FP's ban in June 2001 fragmented Millî Görüş further, with remnants in the Felicity Party (SP) and later New Welfare Party (YRP) achieving marginal results—typically under 2% nationally in subsequent elections—without parliamentary representation or coalitions due to the 10% electoral threshold and voter shifts.[58]Split with the AKP and Ideological Divergence
The closure of the Virtue Party by Turkey's Constitutional Court on June 22, 2001, precipitated a major schism within the Milli Görüş movement, as reformist figures including Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Abdullah Gül rejected the traditionalist adherence to Necmettin Erbakan's pan-Islamist framework.[59] These leaders, who had risen through Erbakan's Welfare and Virtue parties but sought broader electoral viability amid repeated bans, formed the Justice and Development Party (AKP) on August 14, 2001, explicitly positioning it as a break from Milli Görüş's rigid ideology.[60] Erbakan's loyalists, emphasizing continuity with the movement's anti-Western and Islamist roots, established the Felicity Party (Saadet Partisi) shortly thereafter on July 20, 2001, to preserve the core tenets of Milli Görüş.[36] Ideologically, the AKP diverged by adopting a "conservative democracy" model that prioritized market-oriented reforms, democratic consolidation, and initial support for European Union accession, framing itself as post-Islamist and appealing to secular conservatives disillusioned with Kemalist establishments.[36] This contrasted sharply with Saadet's unwavering commitment to Erbakan's "Just Order" economic system, which critiqued Western capitalism and advocated Islamic alternatives like interest-free banking and resource redistribution among Muslim nations.[41] AKP leaders publicly disavowed Milli Görüş's historical rhetoric of jihad and D-8 Islamic economic bloc formation, aiming instead for pragmatic governance that complied with secular constitutional norms to avoid further party closures.[17] Erbakan denounced the AKP as a deviationist faction that compromised Milli Görüş principles for power, accusing it of diluting Islamist goals in favor of neoliberal policies and alliances with global institutions.[60] Saadet maintained a purist stance, criticizing AKP's early foreign policy shifts—such as improved ties with Israel and the West—as abandonment of pan-Islamism, while AKP's electoral success in November 2002, securing 34.3% of the vote, validated its moderated approach by drawing support beyond traditional Milli Görüş bases.[61] Over time, this split institutionalized a rivalry, with Saadet polling under 5% in subsequent elections, underscoring the ideological chasm between unyielding traditionalism and adaptive conservatism.[41]International Dimensions
Expansion to Turkish Diaspora in Europe
The Millî Görüş movement extended its influence to the Turkish diaspora in Europe during the large-scale labor migrations from Turkey starting in the 1960s. A bilateral recruitment agreement in 1961 facilitated the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Turkish guest workers to West Germany, primarily for employment in coal mines, steel factories, and later textiles and electronics. By 1973, over 1 million Turks resided in Germany, comprising about a quarter of the foreign population there, with subsequent family reunifications sustaining community growth. The movement, seeking to organize these migrants religiously and culturally, established its initial presence among them from the 1970s onward.[6] In Germany, the epicenter of this expansion, Millî Görüş founded its first branch in 1976 as Türkischen Union Deutschland e.V., which served as a precursor to the more formalized Islamic Community Millî Görüş (IGMG), established in 1995 with headquarters in Cologne. The IGMG operates 323 mosques and cultural centers, drawing around 30,000 formal members in Germany while engaging a wider audience through religious services and education programs aimed at preserving Islamic identity against secular influences and assimilation pressures. Across Europe, the movement claimed approximately 87,000 members by the early 2000s, with weekly activities attracting up to 300,000 participants.[1][6] The expansion leveraged the diaspora's need for independent religious infrastructure, distinct from Turkish state-affiliated bodies like Diyanet, by emphasizing moral education, community welfare, and advocacy for Muslim interests. Affiliated organizations proliferated in countries such as Belgium, the Netherlands, Austria, and France, adapting Millî Görüş principles to local Turkish immigrant contexts through regional federations that promoted self-reliance and Islamic governance models. This network solidified the movement's role as a key conservative force within Europe's Turkish communities, fostering transnational ties back to Turkey while navigating host-country integration demands.[6][1]Organizational Structure in Germany
The Islamische Gemeinschaft Millî Görüş (IGMG) serves as the central organization representing the Millî Görüş movement in Germany, overseeing a network of local communities, mosques, and affiliated groups primarily among Turkish immigrants.[62] [1] Established in its current form in the 1980s following earlier initiatives like the Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Türkisch-Islamischen Kulturvereine (AMGT) dating back to 1976, IGMG coordinates religious, social, and educational activities across the country.[7] [63] At the apex of IGMG's hierarchy is the Executive Board, the highest decision-making and administrative body, chaired by the President and including a Secretary-General along with deputy chairs responsible for key divisions such as Organizational Structure, Irshad (religious guidance), Education, and Corporate Communications.[64] [62] This central leadership, based at the organization's head office, directs policy and operations for approximately 2,500 branches when including specialized affiliates like the Women's Organization, Youth Organization, and University Community.[65] IGMG maintains 15 regional organizations in Germany, covering areas including Hamburg, Bremen, Berlin, Hanover, Northern Ruhr, Ruhr-A, Düsseldorf, Cologne, Hessen, and Württemberg, each managing local mosques and community centers that form the grassroots level of the structure.[62] These regions facilitate decentralized implementation of central directives, with around 640 communities overall in IGMG's international network, though the German branches constitute the core operational base with an estimated 170,000 members globally, a significant portion in Germany.[62] Affiliated entities, such as youth and women's groups, operate semi-autonomously but align with Millî Görüş principles, emphasizing community welfare, Islamic education, and cultural preservation.[65]Activities in Other European Countries and Beyond
In the Netherlands, Milli Görüş operates through a network of approximately 50 organizations, encompassing mosques and community groups, with an estimated 15,000 supporters primarily among the Turkish diaspora.[66] These entities focus on religious education, youth programs, and cultural preservation, including trips for Turkish-Dutch youth to Turkey for interactions with Islamist figures, which have drawn scrutiny for promoting conservative ideologies.[66] The movement's activities emphasize maintaining Turkish-Islamic identity amid integration pressures, often through mosque-based social services and advocacy against secular policies.[67] In Belgium, Milli Görüş has established a structured presence competing with state-backed Diyanet institutions, organizing religious services, community events, and educational initiatives tailored to Turkish immigrants.[68] Its strategies include fostering parallel Islamic networks for worship and socialization, with a focus on doctrinal independence from official Turkish religious oversight.[69] Local branches manage mosques and youth groups, promoting Milli Görüş's anti-Western economic and political tenets while navigating Belgium's multicultural framework.[68] France hosts Milli Görüş activities since 1995, primarily through the Confédération des Musulmans de France liée à la Turquie (CMTF) or affiliated groups, which operate around 30 mosques and community centers in areas with Turkish populations.[70] These organizations provide religious instruction, halal certification, and social welfare, while rejecting France's 2021 charter on republican values, leading to government designations as non-compliant and potential dissolution risks.[71][72] Aligned with Turkey's AKP, the groups advocate for Islamist governance models, prompting French authorities to view them as vectors for foreign influence and separatism.[73] In Austria, Milli Görüş affiliates, including elements of the Avrupa Milli Görüş Teşkilatı (AMGT), maintain mosque networks and cultural associations independent of larger Turkish state organs, engaging in religious propagation and community mobilization.[74] These have faced Austrian parliamentary motions for inspections and potential closures as "Islamist associations" due to perceived extremism risks, alongside groups like ATİB.[75] Activities center on preserving orthodox Sunni practices and resisting assimilation, with limited political involvement compared to Germany.[74] Beyond Europe, Milli Görüş maintains negligible organized presence, with no major institutions or widespread activities documented in regions like North America, Australia, or elsewhere; its focus remains confined to Turkish diaspora communities in Western Europe, where it sustains ideological continuity with Turkey's Islamist currents.[76][77]Controversies and Debates
Accusations of Extremism and Anti-Semitism
Millî Görüş has faced accusations of promoting extremism, particularly through its ideological opposition to secular democracy and advocacy for an Islamic order, with the German branch, the Islamische Gemeinschaft Millî Görüş (IGMG), designated as an Islamist extremist organization by the German Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) in its 2005 annual report.[78] The BfV cited the group's efforts to establish a parallel Islamic society, resistance to Western values, and propagation of anti-constitutional ideas, including support for sharia elements over German law, though no direct involvement in violence was alleged.[79] Similar concerns were raised in European Parliament queries in 2002 regarding IGMG's potential threat to EU member states via Islamist extremism.[80] Founder Necmettin Erbakan's rhetoric has been central to charges of anti-Semitism, including statements portraying Jews as conspiratorial actors controlling global finance and media through exploitative mechanisms like interest-based banking, described by critics as blending anti-Zionism with classic anti-Semitic tropes.[17] In a 2007 Turkish television interview, Erbakan alleged that Jews adhere blindly to Torah commands for world domination, employ mystical practices like Kabbalah for manipulation, and back exploitative systems, remarks translated and highlighted by the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) as virulent anti-Semitism.[81] Erbakan's ideology, which formed the core of Millî Görüş, integrated such views into a narrative of Jewish orchestration of Western imperialism against Muslim societies, influencing successor publications and speeches within the movement.[82] These anti-Semitic elements have persisted in diaspora activities, with Hudson Institute analyses noting their visibility in IGMG materials and events, despite the group's public disavowals of overt hatred.[1] Accusations intensified post-9/11, linking Millî Görüş's anti-Western stance to broader Islamist networks, though German monitoring has emphasized ideological rather than operational extremism, with the BfV continuing surveillance into the 2010s for potential radicalization risks among youth.[83] Critics, including think tanks like the Bipartisan Policy Center, argue that Erbakan's foundational anti-Semitism remains embedded, rejecting claims of moderation as superficial.[36]Conflicts with Secular Institutions
The Millî Görüş movement, through its political arm the Welfare Party (Refah Partisi), encountered significant opposition from Turkey's secular institutions during Necmettin Erbakan's tenure as prime minister from June 1996 to June 1997. On February 28, 1997, the National Security Council, dominated by military leaders, issued a memorandum demanding actions to counter perceived Islamist threats to secularism, including closing Quran courses, restricting religious attire in public institutions, and curbing irtica (reactionary Islamism).[84][85] This "post-modern coup" pressured Erbakan's coalition government to implement these measures, ultimately forcing his resignation on June 18, 1997, after the military refused to approve military promotions aligned with his preferences.[86][87] Following Erbakan's ouster, the Constitutional Court intensified scrutiny on the Welfare Party, culminating in its dissolution on January 16, 1998, for serving as a "center of activities contrary to the principle of secularism" as enshrined in Article 2 of the Turkish Constitution.[88][89] The court's ruling cited evidence such as party leaders' advocacy for sharia-based governance, public endorsements of multi-party systems under Islamic law, and initiatives like a proposed "just order" system challenging secular economic principles.[90] Erbakan and five other senior members received a five-year ban from political activities, reflecting the judiciary's role in enforcing Kemalist secularism against Islamist ideological encroachment.[48] The European Court of Human Rights upheld the ban in 2003, ruling that Turkey's measures were proportionate to protect democratic secularism from threats posed by the party's anti-secular program, which included plans for parallel Islamic structures and tolerance of violence against secular opponents.[89] This decision affirmed that while political pluralism is protected under Article 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights, it does not extend to parties pursuing the abolition of secular democracy.[91] Millî Görüş's repeated party dissolutions—preceded by earlier bans on its precursors like the National Order Party in 1971—highlighted systemic institutional resistance, rooted in fears that its vision of a "new civilization" prioritizing Islamic norms would undermine the republic's foundational separation of religion and state.[47]