FAMILY TARGETED BY SWAT TEAM
WITH BATTERING RAM HITS BACK, Human rights
court could say German gov't cannot 'abduct children' from parents, by Bob
Unruh, 4/15/17, WND
The German family that was
confronted at its front door by a government SWAT team
armed with a battering ram because they were homeschooling
is fighting back. And the result could be an affirmation of parental
rights for the 800 million Europeans who are subject to the European Court of
Human Rights.
“I sincerely hope the European Court
of Human Rights will reaffirm that the state has no right to abduct children
from their family just because they are being homeschooled,” said Dirk
Wunderlich, the father. “Our youngest daughter was only 4 years old when
the authorities broke into our home and took our children without warning. She
couldn’t stop crying for 11 days. Her older sister hasn’t laughed since this
incident. We chose to educate our children at home, because we believe this to
be the best environment for them to learn and thrive.”
WND
reported in August 2013 when four
of the Wunderlich children, at the time ages 7 to 14, were forcibly removed
from their Darmstadt, Germany, home by police armed with a battering ram. The
case was documented minute-by-minute by the Home School Legal Defense Association, HSLDA, the recognized experts on homeschooling
worldwide.
Dirk and Petra Wunderlich already had
battled the bureaucracy in their home country over its World War II-era
requirement that all children submit to the indoctrination programs in the
nation’s public schools. But the raid gave parents around the world, including
the millions who saw the WND report, a shock.
HSLDA reported the paperwork that
authorized police officers and social workers to use force on the children –
observers described the raid as “brutal and vicious” – contained no claims of
mistreatment within the family. But it was carried out by a team of 20 social
workers, police and special agents who stormed the family’s home at 8 a.m.,
just as they were starting class for the day, on the authorization of a Judge
Koenig.
“Citing the parents’ failure to
cooperate ‘with the authorities to send the children to school,’ the judge also
authorized the use of force ‘against the children’ … reasoning that such force
might be required because the children had ‘adopted the parents’ opinions’
regarding homeschooling and that ‘no cooperation could be expected’ from either
the parents or the children,” HSLDA said at the time.
“I looked through a side window and
saw many people, police and special agents, all armed. They told me they wanted
to come in to speak with me. I tried to ask questions, but within seconds,
three police officers brought a battering ram and were about to break the door
in, so I opened it,” Dirk Wunderlich said.
Now the Alliance Defending
Freedom International has submitted arguments to the
European Court of Human Rights in the case on behalf of the Wunderlichs. “The
eventual judgment in the case will have wide implications regarding parental
rights for the 800 million Europeans who are subject to the rulings of the
court,” the lawyers reported.
“Children deserve the loving care
and protection of their parents. It is a serious thing for a country to
interfere with the parent-child bond, so it should only do so where there is a
real risk of serious harm,” said ADF International Director of European
Advocacy Robert Clarke. He’s been lead counsel for the family in their case
against the government.
“Petra and Dirk Wunderlich simply
exercised their parental right to raise their children in line with their
philosophical and religious convictions – something they believe they can do
better in the home environment. The right of parents to direct the upbringing
of their children is a fundamental right protected in all of the major human
rights treaties.
Germany has signed on to these
treaties and yet continues to ignore its obligations with devastating
consequences,” he said. While Germany’s ban on homeschooling dates back about a
century, the nation since then has signed a number of international human
rights agreements explicitly providing protections for the rights of parents to
direct the education of their children.
Germany’s public school system has
been criticized by many for teaching anti-Christian perspectives, a
pro-abortion stance and much more. The conflict between what the government
demands parents do their children, and what some parents want regarding
schooling, never has been resolved, officials said. But the ECHR ruling should
shed light, ADF said.
“Children are born to parents, not
governments, and Germany’s homeschooling policy is completely out of step with
other free democracies that allow home education as part of their free and
civil societies,” said Mike Donnelly, the HSLDA director of global
outreach.
“Human rights experts at the U.N.
and scholars worldwide have found that home education is a natural, fundamental
and protected human right. The court must hold Germany accountable to respect
this,” he said.
WND
reported two years ago when the
court fight escalated. After the children were returned to their parents, a
German appeals court decided the action against the children was
“disproportional” to the situation. But the government continued to threaten
the parents with jail terms of up to four years for their offense of not having
their children in public schools.
The German government repeatedly has
fretted about homeschool families following “parallel societies” if they are
not required to submit their children to the state indoctrination in government
institutions.
It was Adolf Hitler who denounced
homeschooling and stated the government’s claim to the minds of children. “The
youth of today is ever the people of tomorrow,” he said. “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 un-perverted 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.”
Homeschooling
has been banned in Germany since then. WND
has reported over the years on a
German teen who was ordered into a psychiatric ward for being homeschooled and parents who were sentenced
to jail terms for homeschooling their children. The
current German government has endorsed Hitler’s view of homeschooling. In 2003, the German
Supreme Court handed down the Konrad
decision in which “religiously or philosophically motivated” homeschooling was
banned. Four years later, the German Federal Parliament changed a key provision
of German child protection law, making it easier for children to be taken away
from their parents for supposed “educational neglect.”
HSLDA previously has documented in
the Konrad and Plett cases that the German government considers
homeschooling to be child abuse, even though it is recognized as a right by the
Universal Declaration on Human Rights, the European Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, the United Nations
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
http://www.wnd.com/2017/04/family-targeted-by-swat-team-with-battering-ram-hits-back/
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