A
German couple already being threatened with jail time because they have
been homeschooling their children say their nation has taken a turn for
the worse, with a new federal law that gives family courts the
authority to take custody of children “as soon as there is a suspicion
of child abuse,” which is how that nation’s courts have defined
homeschooling.
“The new law is seen as a logical step in carving up
family rights
after a federal court had decided that homeschooling was an abuse of
custody,” said a letter from Jurgen Dudek to officials with the
U.S.-based Home School Legal Defense
Association, an international advocacy organization in support of
homeschooling.
It was
about a year ago when WND reported
a prosecutor in the German state of Hesse was seeking three-month
prison terms for the Jurgen Dudek and his wife, Rosemarie, the parents
of six children, even after they already had paid a series of fines.
Officials
with Netzwork-Bildungsfreiheit, a German homeschool advocacy group,
said the prosecutor, unsatisfied with the fines, wanted 90-day terms in
custody for the parents.
The latest letter from the family described the new law
as granting
various local social services agencies vast new powers, especially the
“Jugendamt” offices, which are responsible for looking into situations
if there are allegations of “child abuse.”
“They have in effect been authorized to give expert
evidence in
court which the family judge has to follow … The withdrawal of parental
custody as one of the methods for punishing ‘uncooperative’ parents
thus is made even easier,” the letter said.
In recent years Germany has established a reputation for
cracking
down on parents who object, for reasons ranging from religious to
social, to that nation’s public
school
indoctrination of their children.
WND has reported several times on custody battles,
children being
taken into custody, and families even fleeing Germany because of the
situation.
Now comes the new law that, according to Dudek’s letter,
has,
“understandably, led to a kind of panic among the homeschool community
in a country where ever since Hitler’s times it has been against the
law to educate your offspring completely without the state.”
Mike Donnelly, a lawyer for the HSLDA who has worked on
situations
that have developed in Germany, said it’s not exactly clear how the law
will affect the situation.
However, “the fact that Germany’s Federal Government
would pass a
law taking away due process when it comes to taking children away from
their parents just because they are not attending school points to the
sheer hostility of the German government towards homeschooling,” he
told WND.
“The German Jugendamt system is under increasing
scrutiny by the
European Union as well as other international organizations because of
the sheer numbers of custody cases in proportion to actual
substantiated abuse and in relation to the overall population,” he
said. “For homeschoolers, the Jugendamt represents the tip of the spear
in the government’s persecution of parents who simply wish to educate
their children privately at home – a freedom protected by governments
of virtually all free societies.”
He said as a result of the combination of last year’s
German court
ruling that it is an abuse of parental rights to keep children away
from public schools and the new plan, “the Jugendamt is now the most
powerful and frightening force in repressing homeschooling in Germany.
“Families in Germany are being put under increasing
pressure to stop
homeschooling or face losing custody of their children just because
they homeschool – instead many families flee the country. This
reprehensible behavior violates the natural rights of parents and
children and must be opposed by all free societies,” he said.
Practical
Homeschool Magazine
has noted one of the first acts by Hitler when he moved into power was
to create the governmental Ministry of Education and give it control of
all schools, and school-related issues.
In 1937, the dictator said, “The Youth of today is ever
the people
of tomorrow. For this reason we have set before ourselves the task of
inoculating our youth with the spirit of this community of the people
at a very early age, at an age when human beings are still unperverted
and therefore unspoiled. This Reich stands, and it is building itself
up for the future, upon its youth. And this new Reich will give its
youth to no one, but will itself take youth and give to youth its own
education and its own upbringing.”
Dudek told the HSLDA that, “Without wanting to
overdramatize things
this move by the justice ministry … can be compared to Hitler’s law of
empowerment … That law gave him a free hand to turn Germany into the
dictatorship it has become so ‘famous’ for.”
“Homeschoolers will be among the first to feel the wrath
of our
quasi-GESTAPO for the young: there is an explicit paragraph in the law
dealing with the Jugendamt’s duty to enforce ’schulpflicht,’ the
‘punishment’ for [homeschooling] automatically being the withdrawal of
parental custody,” he wrote.
He said although some officials had not yet signed the
law, it appeared unstoppable.
In his own family’s case, he must appear in court on
June 18.
One of the
higher-profile cases on which WND has reported was that of a teen
who was taken by police to the psychiatric ward because she was
homeschooled.
The courts ruled it was appropriate for a judge to order
police
officers
to take Melissa Busekros, 15 at the time, into custody during January
2007.
Officials later declined to re-arrest after she simply
fled state custody and returned to her family.
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….”
Drautz said schools teach socialization, and as
WND reported,
that is important, as evident in the government’s response when a
German family wrote 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. “… 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.”