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Mandatory 'integration' of children pursued
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."
Source: WorldNetDaily, February 14, 2008
Open season on homeschoolers
The government letter is addressed to "School Administrations of State and
Private Schools" and its subject line specifies "Custody withdrawal for
violation of mandatory school attendance."
"The [German] court determined that the parents' refusal to send their
children to either a state or a state approved private school is a misuse of
parental custody rights, which violates the well-being of the child," the
letter, dated just a few weeks ago, said, "and which requires actions by the
family court. …"
Source: WorldNetDaily, January 11, 2008
Parents race to escape before court takes kids
A homeschooling family is trying to arrange an escape from Germany
before authorities can complete a court action that would give the state custody
of their five children, according to a pro-family advocacy organization.
Source: WorldNetDaily, January 5, 2008
Parents to beg for their own grocery money
Homeschooling parents who have been battling the
government over their children's education are heading into court today to beg
permission to use some of their own money for groceries, after authorities froze
their personal and business bank accounts.
Source: WorldNetDaily, November 15, 2007
American missionaries targeted for deportation
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.
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 26, 2007
German Government Publication Promotes Incestuous Pedophilia as Healthy Sex Ed
Booklets from a subsidiary of the German government's Ministry for
Family Affairs encourage parents to sexually massage their children as young as
1 to 3 years of age.
Source: Life Site, July 30, 2007
Prosecutor wants homeschool parents jailed
A federal prosecutor in the German state of Hesse
has announced plans to seek three-month prison terms for a mother and father who
homeschool their six children, even though the family already has paid fines for
violating the nation's Hitler-era homeschooling ban and made plans to move.
Source: WorldNetDaily, May 19, 2007
Court gives Melissa back to family
A German appeals court has ordered legal custody
of Melissa Busekros, 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.
Source: WorldNetDaily, May 17, 2007
3 families face fines, frozen accounts
Three families have released a letter pleading
with Christians worldwide for prayer because of their "difficulties" – fines
equal to thousands of dollars, frozen bank accounts and even the threat of the
sale of the family home – because they homeschool their children.
Source: April 12, 2007
5 'well-educated' kids put in state custody
Five "well-educated" children have been ordered
into state custody by a court that applied to a second family a ruling taking a
15-year-old homeschooler from her family and sending her to a psychiatric ward.
Source: WorldNetDaily, March 22, 2007
Girl, 15, begs to return to homeschooling parents
A teenager taken from her home and parents by
German police officers and institionalized in a psychiatric ward for
homeschooling is pleading with the international community for help so she can
return home.
Source: WorldNetDaily, March 15, 2007
Psych tests ordered for homeschooling parents
A German appeals court has not only affirmed a
lower court's decision that ripped a 15-year-old homeschooler from her family
and subjected her to a forced stay in a psychiatric hospital because she is
homeschooled, but also ordered her parents to be given psychiatric evaluations,
an international rights organization says.
Source: WorldNetDaily, March 13, 2007
3rd Reich homeschool prohibition defended
In
a response published on a blog to a letter expressing concern about Melissa's
case, Wolfgang Drautz, consul general of the Federal Republic of Germany,
said that "the public 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.
Source: WorldNetDaily, 28, 2007
Homeschool
family told to give up 5 other kids
German authorities who sent 15 uniformed police
officers to take custody of a 15-year-old girl who committed the crime of being
homeschooled now have suggested a solution that, in their minds, would "resolve"
the situation: the parents should give up custody of their other five children.
Source: WorldNetDaily, February 25, 2007
Court-ordered foster care replaces psych ward
"Melissa called her parents today to tell them she
was moved to another mental ward. She was then moved to a 'clearing house' and
finally to a foster family; but she was unable to tell them where she is now,"
said a statement from the
the International
Human Rights Group, which has tried to involve the international community
in the attack on homeschooling in Germany.
Source: WorldNetDaily, February 20, 2007
Homeschool
student disappears from psych ward
Officials who work in support of homeschoolers in
Germany, even though it is illegal there, notified WND that Melissa Busekros, in
a "new escalation," was moved from the psychiatric hospital where she had been
held for more than a week "to an unknown place."
Source: WorldNetDaily, February 13, 2007
Police
take home-taught student to psych ward
The news of nearly two dozen officials and
uniformed police officers physically taking the teen from her home in front of
her shocked family is just the latest horror story to come out of Germany, where
homeschooling was placed under a ban by Adolf Hitler and der Fuhrer's law still
is enforced.
Source: WorldNetDaily, February 3, 2007
Government
declares war on homeschooling families
The German government, in a throwback to its National Socialist Workers
Party heritage, has declared war on homeschool families, promising to bring
those with banned "religious convictions" into alignment with the state
regulations.
Source: WorldNetDaily, December 21, 2006
'Pesky
religion freedoms obstruct German society'
A nation where the law bans homeschooling, and police have been known to
physically haul children from their homes to public school facilities, now has a
judicial official who says those pesky religious rights are getting in the way
of society.
Source: WorldNetDaily, December 15, 2006
Achtung! Germany drags homeschool kids to class
A Nazi-era law requiring all children to attend public school, to avoid
"the emergence of parallel societies based on separate philosophical
convictions" that could be taught by parents at home, apparently is triggering a
Nazi-like response from police.
Source: WorldNetDaily, October 25, 2006
Campaign to overturn law that jailed homeschool mom
The campaign from the Home School Legal Defense Association follows word
that since homeschooling never has been legalized in Germany since Hitler banned
it, a mother was arrested and detained on such charges.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 26, 2006
A day in court for German schoolgirl who insulted teacher
A schoolgirl faces prosecution and possible house arrest
for allegedly insulting her teacher in a case that will strike fear into
unruly classrooms across Germany. Achim Jülicher, 38, who teaches German,
reported Jacqueline Kirsch, 17, to police for undermining his authority
after she declared in front of classmates that he was “not right in the
head”.
Source: news.telegraph, December 11, 2005
German Court: Muslim Students Must Swim
The deeply religious Muslim parents of the 11-year-old
student were trying to prevent their son from attending swimming classes,
where he would mix with girls in bathing suits. They filed a complaint in a
Düsseldorf court against school officials. But the court rejected their
case, saying that religious beliefs are not a reason to prevent children
from attending swimming classes and said that the boy must attend them in
the future.
Source: DW-World.de, June 1, 2005
Doo-ing duty: Dogs to be DNA tested?
Is it the latest case of government waste, or just politicians "taking
care of business?"
In the German city of Dresden, lawmakers believe they're doo-ing their
duty as they consider collecting DNA samples from dogs to help make sure
owners clean up after their pets.
WorldNetDaily, March 31, 2005
Paying by Fingerprint at the Supermarket
Customers of a German supermarket chain will soon be able to pay for
their shopping by placing their finger on a scanner at the check-out, saving
the time spent scrabbling for coins or cards.
Source: MyWay, March 14, 2005
Germany continues targeting homeschoolers
German Christians who choose to homeschool their children are
coming under continued enforcement action by the government, with one
group of families fearful they may lose custody of their kids.
Source: WorldNetDaily, January 21, 2005
Hitler's mentally ill relative was sent to gas chamber
The Holocaust unleashed
by Adolf Hilter even touched his own family, it emerged yesterday, as
evidence was uncovered that one of the Nazi leader's relatives was
murdered by the German state.
The woman, identified only as Aloisia V, was the great-grandchild of
the sister of Hitler's paternal grandmother. She became one of
thousands of mentally ill people exterminated as part of a systematic
campaign to eliminate or sterilise those deemed socially undesirable.
Aged 49 at her death, Aloisia, who is thought to have suffered from
schizophrenia, was gassed to death at Hartheim Castle near the
northern Austrian city of Linz on 6 December 1940.
Source: The Independent (online),
January 19, 2005
Judges try to snatch homeschoolers
Germans who choose to homeschool their children are coming under
increasing pressure from the state with some families escaping the
European Union nation to keep from having their children taken from
them.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 8, 2004
Iris scanning to begin at German airport
A test of an iris-scanning system is set to begin Saturday at the
Frankfurt, Germany, airport, as part of a project involving 18 European
countries.
Source: ZDNet, February 13, 2004
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