Page 523 - Mastermind: The Truth of the British Deep State Revealed
P. 523

Adnan Harun Yahya






                            Abdul Hamid II Orders that Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
                            Be Sent to A Mental Asylum


                            Bediüzzaman Said Nursi was a brave servant of God, who noticed and drew
                            attention to the evil plans of the British deep state since he was a young man.
                            It didn't take long before the British deep state members saw this dedicated

                            man's intelligence and talent, and tried to stop him. One of those attempts
                            happened when Said Nursi came to Istanbul to visit Sultan Abdul Hamid II.
                            In 1907, Said Nursi requested an audience with Sultan Abdul Hamid II to tell

                            him about his ideas on the foundation of a university in Van, which he called
                            'Madrasah al-Zahra', and where Islamic and physical sciences would be taught
                            together. However, when he went to the Palace, he was arrested for the so-
                            called 'crime' of wearing traditional clothing and a turban, and was sent to

                            Üsküdar Toptaşı Mental Asylum. This unfair practice, carried out upon Ab-
                            dul Hamid II's instructions, was a clear example of the fear and concern Said
                            Nursi invoked in the British deep state with his unprecedented bravery.

                            Dr. Hamid Uras, one of the most esteemed doctors of Gaziantep, was at the
                            asylum at the time Said Nursi was brought in. He recalled the incident with
                            the following words:

                            It was during the Second Constitutional period and we were students in the
                            Medical School. Nursi was also in Istanbul at the time. … He was very well
                            known, his fame had spread everywhere. … they sent him to be examined by a
                            government doctor, a Greek. The doctor interviewed Said and in the course of

                            their conversation Said took a textbook on anatomy from the bookcase and read
                            four or five pages, then asked the doctor to test him on it. The doctor did so and
                            was left in amazement as the patient read the pages back to him from memo-

                            ry word for word. He apologized to Said and wrote a favorable report to be sent
                            to the palace by means of the police chief. 1
                            Following the report stating that Said Nursi had no mental problems, he was

                            discharged and sent back to the police headquarters. This prompted Abdul
                            Hamid II to offer Said Nursi money to go back to his city, which Said Nursi
                            immediately declined.




                             1. Şükran Vahide, Islam in Modern Turkey: An Intellectual Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, State
                             University of New York Press, New York, 2005, p. 39
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