Government says such Christians don't give children to state schools
By Bob Unruh
The German government is targeting an American family of Baptist
missionaries for deportation because they belong to a group that
refuses "to give their children over to the state school system,"
according to an international homeschool support organization.
The Home School Legal Defense Association works worldwide for the
benefit of those who wish to teach their own children themselves.
Officials there, and at several other international organizations, have
been fighting for several years to convince the German government to
recognize the well-established rights of parents to do that.
Michael Farris, cofounder of Home School Legal Defense Association
However, there's been little headway, and HSLDA cofounder Michael P.
Farris has told WND Germany is taking an "incredibly hard-line
approach" against homeschooling.
In fact, authorities in Germany earlier declared war on homeschoolers,
taking one young girl to a psychiatric ward for the offense of being
homeschooled.
In the newest case, the attack has been turned against a family of
American Christians who arrived in Germany to provide services to the
public.
According to a report from the HSLDA, Clint Robinson, his wife Susan
and their three children arrived in Germany in March after they sold
their possessions in the U.S. and left to work as missionaries.
When they arrived, they applied for a residency permit, required by the
government, according to the HSLDA and its affiliated German
organization, called Schulunterricht Zu Hause.
But local authorities implied that such permission never would be
granted to independent missionaries, "as they were already aware that
these missionaries refuse to give their children over to the state
school system."
"German officials appear to be more determined than ever to rid their
country of influences that may contribute to the rise of what they call
'Parallelgesellschaften,' parallel societies," the HSLDA said in a
statement. "Never mind that Germany has hundreds of thousands of
genuinely truant youth hanging around street corners; school officials
have determined that parents diligently educating their children at
home are a greater danger to German society.
"Now it would seem that German officials are not content to go after
their own citizens, but are also targeting American missionaries who
homeschool," the group said.
The family's official rejection came just a few weeks ago, the HSLDA
said, and they were given 45 days to leave or be "forcibly deported."
Then this month, the German homeschool advocates filed a court appeal
on behalf of the family, delaying any action at least temporarily,
officials said.
"The Robinsons are now working on a compromise that may result in a
two-year visa, but to get it they will apparently be forced to promise
they will leave at the end of that time and not seek an extension," the
HSLDA said.
The organization said it is working with several other groups and local
German attorneys to file strategic litigation that would pressure
German policy makers into a change.
"Because Germany is a member of the European Union and signatory to a
variety of UN declarations and other human rights protocols, it is
possible to use the venues to bring attention to this issue," the group
said.
A spokesman for HSLDA told WND that there also are several American
military families located in Germany who are homeschooling, but those
individual cases haven't attracted the attention of authorities yet.
Homeschooling has been in illegal in Germany since the days of Hitler,
but the crackdowns seem to be tightening. In recent months
homeschoolers have been fined the equivalent of thousands of dollars,
had custody of their children taken away, had their homes threatened
with seizure and in one case, that of Melissa Busekros, had a team of
SWAT officers arrive on a doorstep with orders to seize her, "if
necessary by force."
"It seems as if a week doesn't go by without another family being
threatened with fines, imprisonment, or the loss of their children,"
Farris said in a letter to constituents.
"In most cases families are fined, in some cases thousands of dollars,
or when threatened with the removal of their children by German Youth
Welfare authorities, have fled the country," he continued. "Other
families have been (and remain) separated for years – the fathers
remaining in Germany to provide for their families and mothers and
children living in another country where they are able to safely
homeschool."
And yes, the penalties have gone further. "Mothers and fathers have
been also imprisoned, had their bank accounts confiscated, their wages
garnished, or their businesses ruined by the actions of their local
government," he said. The "now infamous" court case "Konrad v. Germany"
in which the European Court of Human Rights essentially said that
parental rights to raise their children must take second place to the
government's objections to homeschooling, "has clearly demonstrated
that German homeschoolers have no hope of relief from their courts," he
said.
He said German officials are filled with fear that homeschooling will
result in parallel societies, such as Islamic fundamentalism, that
would create a danger, even though those in the United States
understand it supports pluralism.
In the case involving Melissa Busekros, a German appeals court ordered
legal custody of the teenager who was taken from her home by a police
squad and detained in a psychiatric hospital for being homeschooled, be
returned to her family because she no longer is in danger.
The lower court's ruling had ordered police officers to take Melissa –
then 15 – from her home, if necessary by force, and place her in a
mental institution for a variety of evaluations. She was kept in
custody from early February until April, when she turned 16 and under
German law was subject to different laws.
At that point she simply walked away from the foster home where she had
been required to stay and returned home, but she and her family had
been living under the possibility that police would intervene again.
Wolfgang Drautz, consul general for the Federal Republic of Germany,
has commented on the issue on a blog, noting the government "has a
legitimate interest in countering the rise of parallel societies that
are based on religion or motivated by different world views and in
integrating minorities into the population as a whole."
Drautz said homeschool students' test results may be as good as for
those in school, but "school teaches not only knowledge but also social
conduct, encourages dialogue among people of different beliefs and
cultures, and helps students to become responsible citizens."
The German government's defense of its "social" teachings and mandatory
public school attendance was clarified during an earlier dispute on
which WND reported, when a German family wrote to officials objecting
to police officers picking their child up at home and delivering him to
a public school.
"The minister of education does not share your attitudes toward
so-called homeschooling," said a government letter in response. "...
You complain about the forced school escort of primary school children
by the responsible local police officers. ... In order to avoid this in
future, the education authority is in conversation with the affected
family in order to look for possibilities to bring the religious
convictions of the family into line with the unalterable school
attendance requirement."
Original
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