They have to obey the law in educating their kids,' official says
Fifteen Christian families from a tiny community of only about 1,300
people are making plans to leave their homes and work behind so that
their children will not be forced by the Canadian government to attend
"sanctioned" schools where evolution is taught.
A report in the Vancouver Sun said provincial officials have threatened
the families with legal action, including the potential loss of their
children to state control, if they do not abide by the mandatory
education curriculum.
But leaders of the Mennonite families say they'll leave Quebec before
giving up their children to the state indoctrination.
(Story continues below)
"It's kind of sad because we enjoy the community, we have friends and
we have good rapport with our neighbors," said Ronald Goossen, 56, who
in the 1990s was among the first Mennonites from Manitoba to move to
Roxton Falls, about 75 mile east of Montreal.
"But when they threaten to take our children and put them in foster
homes, that's beyond what we can accept," he said.
The Mennonites, whose forefathers broke away from the reforms of Martin
Luther because they were not radical enough and adopted several
distinctive practices including adult baptism, established their own
school in the community a few years after they arrived. Last year eight
children were enrolled in grades 1-7, and this year 11 students were
expected.
Children are taught reading, writing, math, science, geography, social
sciences and music, as well as English and French.
But they didn't use the government-mandated curriculum that includes
the teachings of evolution, and other subjects to which parents
objected. So authorities warned the parents they would face legal
proceedings if their children were not enrolled in "sanctioned" schools
this fall.
Goossen said the 30 parents and children in families who would be
endangered will move immediately; the rest of the group will follow
shortly later.
Officials said in addition to the issue of the curriculum, the teacher
at the Mennonite school was not "certified."
"To do that, we would have to send teachers to schools we don't want to
send our children to," Goossen said.
"We don't agree with the emphasis on evolution, which we consider
false; we don't like the morality standards; and we don't like the
acceptance of alternative lifestyles," he said.
Town Mayor Jean-Marie Laplante has written to governmental officials
seeking a one-year reprieve.
"We want to keep these people here – they're part of our community,"
Laplante told the newspaper.
The mayor said losing the families would hurt both economically and
socially.
But officials were adamant.
"We are not trying to prevent them from living their life the way they
want, but they have to obey the law when it comes to educating their
kids," said Education Ministry spokesman Francois Lefebvre.
The Mennonite, or Anabaptist, movement started in the 16th Century when
a group of believers decided Luther hadn't gone far enough.
Church-state structures, however, didn't tolerate them well, and over
the next generations thousands were persecuted or martyred.
Survivors often went into hiding and from 1575 to 1850, membership grew
primarily by parents passing their beliefs to their children. Today
more than a million people around the world claim the Christian beliefs
of Mennonites in about 60 countries.
Original
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Christians would rather move than hear evolution
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