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Police Take Home-Taught Student to Psych Ward
World Net Daily ^ | 2/3/2007 | Bob Unruh

Posted on 02/03/2007 12:33:32 PM PST by Dallas59

A nation whose education officials already have warned that they will, when necessary, "bring the religious convictions of the family into line" with state requirements, now has removed a 16-year-old girl from her family and placed her in a child psychiatry unit after she turned in below-expected grades in math and Latin.

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.

The stories are concerning to homeschoolers in the rest of the world, including the United States, because of the real potential that international law eventually could be used to ban such activities in places where it now is legal.

The newest German case was reported in a statement delivered to WND by Netzwerk-Bildungsfreiheit (Net-Education Freedom), an organization that works for homeschoolers' rights in Germany even though it is illegal there.

A spokesman for that group had contacted WND after the news website broke the story that a German government official had warned that families' religious beliefs will have to be brought into alignment with required school attendance laws.

The government at that time had responded to a parent concerned about children being forcibly placed in custody by police officers and then delivered to the mandatory public school system:

"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," the government said.

The student in the newest case was identified by the German organization as Melissa Busekros. She has been removed from her parents' custody, and placed in the Child Psychiatry Unit of the Nuremberg clinic, her father, Hubert Busekros, told the homeschool group.

"What is being done to a sensitive and musical young girl, just because the bureaucrats want to set an example? In their zealous drive to enforce compulsory schooling (which by Melissa's age is only part-time) at all costs, they readily accept the trauma caused to the unassuming and lovable Melissa," the German homeschool said.

"The Netzwerk Bildungsfreiheit condemns this inconsiderate and totally incommensurate behaviour on the part of the officials involved and demands that they give Melissa her freedom and return her to her family immediately."

The case began developing in the summer of 2005, when Melissa, then 15, was told she'd have to repeat the 7th grade at the Ernst High Gymnasium, a public school, due to her grades in math and Latin.

"The situation in the class played no small part in creating this state of affairs – the high noise levels and cancelled classes prevented her from receiving the educational assistance she needed during school hours," the German organization said.

Since she had good grades in all the other classes, she and her parents decided she would be tutored individually at home to meet her needs. She still took part in music and sang in her school's choir.

But school officials were unhappy, and expelled her, so the Busekros family continued educating her at home. At the end of the 2005-2006 school year she was no longer subject to full-time attendance requirements, but the Jugendamt, or Youth Welfare Office still created a case in Family Court and ordered the family to appear at a hearing.

Then this week social workers accompanied by police officers appeared at the home one morning, demanding that Melissa be handed over to them immediately, providing as authorization a ruling by the Erlangen Court dated Jan. 29.

It said, "The relevant Youth Welfare Office is hereby instructed and authorized to bring the child, if necessary by force, to a hearing and may obtain police support for this purpose."

The teen was taken to the Child Psychiatry Unit and interrogated for nearly four hours, after which she was returned home, the Netzwerk said. However, the worst was still to come.

On Thursday, the Family Court judge, staff members of the Youth Welfare Office, and 15 police officers "marched up to the Busekros home, to haul Melissa off to the Child Psychiatry Unit."

"This treatment was justified by the psychiatrist's finding, two days previously, that she was supposedly developmentally delayed by one year and that she suffered from school phobia," the Netzwerk said.

"It is not known when Melissa's parents and siblings will be able to see her again, as the official approach in cases of 'school phobia' is to completely prevent the 'patient' from having any contact with those closest to him or her, as such contact supposedly enables the phobia," the Netzwerk said.

Such issues are alarming U.S. homeschool leaders.

Michael Farris, cofounder of the Home School Legal Defense Association, has called for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to protect the right of parents to educate their children at home, in light of such developments in Europe.

One of his major concerns is that if the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, a plan already accepted as law by many nations around the globe, were ratified by the Senate or adopted by the federal courts as enforceable international law, American homeschooling could be banned.

A homeschool advocate in Germany earlier wrote to WND that, "We are not far away from an intolerant dictatorship in our country. Parental rights are more and more abolished. If you do not the way the state wants, to so-called Jugendamt (youth welfare office) is quickly to check out if they can take away the custody of your children."

He was not being identified because of his position in Germany.

"As long as you practice your faith in a church building you have no problems, but as soon as you act in accordance to your faith, for example, in the education of your children, the freedom ends rapidly," he said.

He likened the situation to that of families under the Nazi regime, or "like in the former Soviet Union under the Communists."

The HSLDA also has pleaded for help for the German community.

"The situation, unfortunately, is not getting any better, and they need your prayers and support," the organization said recently. "Most recently, a decision was handed down by the European Court of Human rights (which) … completely turned the European Union Constitution's Article 14, the section on parent's rights to control the education of their children, completely upside down."

That decision will allow any nation in the EU, should it choose, to outlaw homeschooling. "Meanwhile, the German homeschoolers continue to be unmercifully persecuted. In our last report, we explained that there were approximately 40 families in court at one stage or the other. Families are fleeing regularly to other foreign countries in order to continue homeschooling…"


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Germany; Government
KEYWORDS: government; homeschool; prison; socialism
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To: johnmark7

Authoritarians believe they are God.

The best way show to disdain for them is to pray to the real God.

I will pray for the safety and the freedom of that girl.


21 posted on 02/03/2007 5:42:49 PM PST by perseid 67 (A bleeding heart does nothing but ruin the carpet.)
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To: Dallas59
The stories are concerning to homeschoolers in the rest of the world, including the United States, because of the real potential that international law eventually could be used to ban such activities in places where it now is legal.

I couldn't get past this sentence.

22 posted on 02/03/2007 5:48:03 PM PST by Snoopers-868th
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To: nuconvert

While I'm not sure about this specific Family, I know Germany is awful on Hs-ing.

http://www.hslda.org/hs/international/Germany/default.asp


23 posted on 02/03/2007 6:01:48 PM PST by stentorian conservative
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To: stentorian conservative

I've read before that Germany is very anti-HS. Is that the predominant attitude in Europe or is it unique to Germany? What about private schools? Could HS parents form a co-op type school there and meet the state laws?


24 posted on 02/03/2007 6:03:25 PM PST by SoftballMominVA
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To: SoftballMominVA

Well if the article is correct, the EU could put a serious halt to what few rights parents already have. The current German situation is that a law that was put forth by Hitler himself is being executed. Doesn't sound too promising.


25 posted on 02/03/2007 6:08:06 PM PST by stentorian conservative
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To: sam_paine; Wiffle Head
I'd like to be sure it's not exaggerated.
_________________________________________________________

Since Chuck Norris began writing a column for WND he promised to round house kick anyone who he catches exaggerating.
26 posted on 02/03/2007 6:10:26 PM PST by Grizzled Bear ("Does not play well with others.")
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To: stentorian conservative

I am shocked that there is even one law still on the books put there by Hitler. Seems to me they should have been wiped off years ago. You are right, it is scary.


27 posted on 02/03/2007 6:11:28 PM PST by SoftballMominVA
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To: Grizzled Bear
he promised to round house kick anyone who he catches exaggerating.

LOL. Thanks for the laugh.

I HS my three youngest and I know of a few (hundred) folks who would like to see something like this implemented in this country. We wouldn't want any freethought running amuck.
28 posted on 02/03/2007 6:20:25 PM PST by stentorian conservative
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To: fanfan

I did. Still not clear how accurate the report is, but the facts reported thus far are astonishing.

I know you're not American, but I assure you ... if they institutionalized every American public school student who was a year behind grade level, then every public building in the U.S. would be a school-children's prison.

If 50% of students in a high school are up to grade level, that's considered an incredible victory worthy of statewide celebration!


29 posted on 02/03/2007 7:06:37 PM PST by Tax-chick ("Hyperbolic rodomontade of the most puerile type." ~ Aaron Elkins)
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To: Dallas59
...the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, a plan already accepted as law by many nations around the globe...

This is what we should be alarmed about. This treaty, if ratified, would essentially eliminate any vestige of family autonomy and void any and all parental rights regarding the rearing and educating of children. It is a heinous piece of totalitarian work. Hillary will never mention it during the campaign but if she gets in she'll push it through a 'rat senate.

30 posted on 02/03/2007 8:19:59 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: johnmark7

Such a thoughtful generalization doesn't apply to me.

Unfortunately, it's generally true.


31 posted on 02/03/2007 8:35:56 PM PST by G Larry (Only strict constructionists on the Supreme Court!)
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To: nuconvert; Wiffle Head
I guess that there are some errors in this story (i.e. another reason not to trust WND. According to this site http://www.menschenskinder2000.de/modules.php?name=News&file=print&sid=40 the name of the girl is Amina and she is attending school at Christian Ernst Gymnasium in Erlangen. More here

http://www.hugenottenkirche.de/gemeinde2005/konfirmanden2006.shtml
32 posted on 02/04/2007 12:07:50 AM PST by AdmSmith
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To: AdmSmith

Amina is her first name and Melissa is her second. She had been attending that school before she was homeschooled. The word High crept into my translation because I was going to translate Gymnasium as high school and I didn't see it to take it out before it was published and then WND took the Christian out.


33 posted on 02/04/2007 12:49:13 PM PST by scatty
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To: scatty

Do not post personal information.


34 posted on 02/04/2007 12:50:12 PM PST by Admin Moderator
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To: Admin Moderator

Sorry, but if anyone wants to know how to contact the people responsible can I post a link to it, then?


35 posted on 02/04/2007 2:25:37 PM PST by scatty
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To: scatty

btt


36 posted on 02/04/2007 10:05:18 PM PST by Marie (Unintended consequences.)
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To: stentorian conservative

Germany is ripe for another Hitler. In fact, all Europe is. 666 rising.


37 posted on 02/05/2007 8:09:33 AM PST by mywholebodyisaweapon
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To: stentorian conservative

Hi, I realize that it does not seem possible that this healthy homeschooled teen could really have been forced into the Nurenberg loony bin for disagreeing with the German government, but it really is happening.
I have a list of links to e-mail and call to try and free Melissa including the unit where she is being held and her parents´contact info.
We need some attention from the US. We need some international spotlight put on trying to free Melissa. The German press is saying nothing about it.
Melissa´s parents are just desperate and we other homeschoolers in Germany are anxious. It is an incredible financial difficulty to pick up and move.

As to your other questions: no other country oppresses homeschoolers like Germany. Lots of families have already fled to Austria and other countries.
The WND may be sometimes inaccurate, I do not know, but the story is accurate this time.
Can I post all the contact info?


38 posted on 02/06/2007 12:05:14 AM PST by LindaHarr
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To: Tax-chick

The report you read is accurate. I know the family personally. Her name is actually Amina Melissa Zalona B.
This isn't an isolate case in Germany. No abuse or neglect has taken place here, so I see no reason for hauling her away like a common criminal and institutionalizing her against her will and that of her family. The fact that homeschooling is against the law only shows that the law needs to be changed. Hilter did this to Germany and its high time Germany update its policies. Most people don't want to homeschool, but those who do should have that option if they are qualified to do it well and Amina's family is. I know them. They had her best interests at heart. We need to rally to get her released. Just what is the Jugendamt trying to accomplish by this action?


39 posted on 02/07/2007 9:24:43 PM PST by ddcm
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