Skip to main content.
Related sites:
Religion News Blog is a non-profit service providing academics, religion professionals and other researchers with religion & cult news
ReligionNewsBlog

Religion news articles about religious cults, sects, world religions, and related issues

Navigation:
Web religionnewsblog.com
Home | Site Menu | About RNB | RNB Store | Cult FAQ | Cult Experts | Apologetics Index | Cult Information Search Engine
Twelve Tribes:

Germany: Twelve Tribes fundamentalist Christian group gets school of their own

Deutsche Welle, Germany
Aug. 31, 2006
www.dw-world.de
  • Article Tools  • Share This Story

ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 15827 • Posted: Tuesday September 5, 2006  

Click here... More articles on this topic: Twelve Tribes

A group of fundamentalist Christians in Bavaria has won a long battle for the right to privately teach their children — without sex ed and lessons on evolution. Bavarian officials are calling it an “emergency solution.”

Homeschooling is illegal in Germany, and yet the members of the fundamentalist Christian sect “Zwölf Stämme” (Twelve Tribes) have won a victory of sorts in their fight to educate their children outside of Germany’s state school system.

Bavarian officials have agreed to let the group’s 32 school-aged children be taught by their own teachers in a private school — albeit one that is subject to state controls. The school has initially been limited to a timeframe of one year.

With the creation of the private school, a “years-long illegal situation has been ended,” said Stefan Rössle, district administrator for the region of Donauwörth in Bavaria.

Long battle with the law

Because of their religious convictions, parents in the Twelve Tribes community had been battling with state officials for over four years to keep their children out of state schools. Twelve Tribes members take the Bible’s teachings literally, and prefer to shield their children from some aspects of the modern world. In homeschooling, for example, they teach the creation story, not the theory of evolution.

But because homeschooling is not allowed in Germany, the Twelve Tribes parents paid a high price for their resistance to state education. Over the years, they’ve amassed some 130,000 euros ($167,000) in unpaid fines, watched their children be forcibly enrolled in state schools, and stood by as one father was imprisoned for two weeks for his resistance. Through it all, they refused to bow to the law.

Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: The creation of the private school was an “emergency solution,” state officials said
The result is a compromise solution. The Bavarian Ministry of Educational and Cultural Affairs has approved a curriculum for the group’s new private school in which sex education is absent, but where ethics, rather than religion, will be taught. The parents can choose the teachers, but they have to foot the bill for the school themselves.

Twelve Tribes
This high-demand, racist group is led and controlled by “Super Apostle” Elbert Eugene Spriggs, aka Yoneq.
The group’s aberrant and heretical teachings identify it, theologically, as a cult of Christianity. Sociologically, there are cultic elements as well, including the high level of control leveled over the group’s followers, as well as the beating of children.

“For us, the compromise was mainly about protecting the children’s right to an education,” said a ministry spokesperson.

State still has control

Unlike homeschooling, the school will still be subject to state supervision. State school officials have the right to visit the school at anytime and check on how lessons are being taught.

“We will keep a very watchful eye on the project,” said Rössle.

Green party politicians in the Bavarian state parliament have criticized the compromise, saying the state is not acting in the children’s interest when it allows a “questionable religious community” the freedom to educate outside the state system.

This latest example in Bavaria highlights the difficult position state authorities are in when parents simply refuse to obey the law. In recent months, there have been several incidents of homeschooling families clashing with truancy officials, mostly for religious reasons. Their case histories are documented by several homeschooling initiatives in Germany which are lobbying for greater educational freedom.

Religion News Blog RSS feed Subscribe: Religion News Blog RSS feed  |  Religion News Blog RSS feed Subscribe by topic: Twelve Tribes
more cult news articlemore religion news More articles about Twelve Tribes

Like this story?

Today's Most Popular Articles

Doctor Says...

Share this

To share this page simply copy and paste one of these URL's:




Article and Site Tools

» PermaLink to: Germany: Twelve Tribes fundamentalist Christian group gets school of their own
   Need a shorter link? You can remove everything after the final /
» More news articles + news archive on Twelve Tribes
» More religion and cult news

Subscribe (RSS / Email) [What is RSS?]
» RSS News Feed - All Topics: Religion News Blog RSS Feed
» RSS News Feed - Single Topic: Twelve Tribes
» Headlines by Email: Daily Religion News Blog Headlines

More Article Tools
• Bookmark / Tag: Del.icio.us
• Bookmark / Tag: Furl
Save this article
Email this article
Print this article [Temporarily out of order]

More Information
Books about Twelve Tribes
Relevant books (and other goodies)

About Religion News Blog
Religion News Blog (RNB), published by Apologetics Index, highlights news items and other resources on world religions, cults, religious sects, alternative religions and related issues. RNB's non-profit news clipping service is used by - among others - Christian apologists, countercult professionals, anticult organizations, cult experts, teachers, religion professionals, reporters and other researchers.