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Kareem Irfan: I’ve been to Hizmet schools all over the world. You can be guaranteed that they are the best in terms of facilities in the surroundings. You can be guaranteed they are the most clean, the most tidy, the most professionally run. And it is that approach to excellence that is applied to the avenue of education that makes it tremendously important. Jim Harrington: I am amazed at the dedication of the teachers. These folks that are teaching are dedicated. It’s not an 9-to-5 job or 8-to-5 job. They are dedicated. They stay with the kids at night. They work with them they work with families. It’s a part of that spiritual component I was mentioning earlier that helps people in their work. It’s not like I’m going out to make living… I get make and then I go home. But I am dedicated. This is part of my mission in life is to help kids get educated. So I think the schools are terrific. Ori Soltes: Secondly, there is consistently, in everyone I've met involved with these schools and the Movement at large, a kind of, I want to say radical humility. A certain fundamental calm, a certain sweetness of personality is something that I have consistently encountered in my encounters with the teachers and the administrators involved with the Hizmet-inspired schools, and a kind of dedication that means that they will go not just a hundred percent, but a hundred and fifty percent in favor of what their students need, in order for those students to become more well-rounded human beings. Omer Kaifo: I met the businessman in the second trip to Turkey. The first thing he mentioned he's going to establish a school in Africa not another summerhouse or another castle or another business. He was thinking to establish a school to benefit the needy people even in Africa. They put their own lives at risk. Like in Nigeria now. They have a school there. They have a school and hospitals in Somalia. Scott Alexander: A few years ago I had the opportunity to travel to South Africa, and while I was in South Africa, when I was in Johannesburg, I visited some Hizmet schools. Unfortunately, even since the dismantling of apartheid in 1994, that poverty and oppression still exists. And into that poverty and oppression come a few people who built this Hizmet school in Johannesburg for boys; they visit the homes, they work with the parents to give these young boys an opportunity for a quality education so that they can help, with the grace of God, lift themselves and their families out of that situation of poverty and oppression. Chouadou Traore: Before this school, the rich people or the executive people sent their kids to the French school or the American school but you need to be rich or you need to be from the executive to send your kid there. Now we have the Hizmet Movement schools. You don’t need to be rich, you don’t need to be from the executive, if you can just pay the tuition you can send your kids. The kids need to be intelligent, you know, they need to learn only. Whit Bodman: I met a man who had been teaching in Nepal. That to me was amazing that a Turkish man would go to Nepal and others to Madagascar, very far from Turkey, to set up schools. So this whole education movement that is worldwide that takes a particular gift of education to places like Madagascar, like Nepal, where they otherwise would not have opportunities for such advanced schooling. That was very impressive. http://www.spectramedia.tv / spectramediatv / spectramediatv