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Homeschooling Illegal in Germany
Evidently this issue is not new, but it's the first time I've heard of it.
Homeschooling: German Family Gets Political Asylum in U.S.
The Romeikes are not your typical asylum seekers. They did not come to the U.S. to flee war or despotism in their native land. No, these music teachers left Germany because they didn't like what their children were learning in public school - and because homeschooling is illegal there.
"It's our fundamental right to decide how we want to teach our children," says Uwe Romeike, an Evangelical Christian and a concert pianist who sold his treasured Steinway to help pay for the move.
Romeike decided to uproot his family in 2008 after he and his wife had accrued about $10,000 in fines for homeschooling their three oldest children and police had turned up at their doorstep and escorted them to school. "My kids were crying, but nobody seemed to care," Romeike says of the incident.
So why did he seek asylum in the U.S. rather than relocate to nearby Austria or another European country that allows homeschooling? Romeike's wife Hannelore tells TIME the family was contacted by the Virginia-based Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), which suggested they go to the U.S. and settle in Morristown, Tenn. The nonprofit organization, which defends the rights of the U.S. homeschooling community - with its estimated 2 million children, or about 4% of the total school-age population - is expanding its overseas outreach. And on Jan. 26, the HSLDA helped the Romeikes become the first people granted asylum in the U.S. because they were persecuted for homeschooling.
There have been other instances of this Hitler-era law being enforced, such as the Busekros family's ordeal.
- Stephen M. Smith
They really like holding on to the Prussian school system over there. I'm really loving listening to the School Sucks Podcast especially the episodes where Gard gave it to Lincoln and Roosevelt. Unfortunately I share my hometown with what some could consider FDR's version of Goebbels, Jim Farley and I had to attend the Junior HS named after him. It's so sad that they had to uproot but the minds of their children is harder to get back than a grand piano.
There is a lot to be learned from the homeschooling movement. Many people that want to teach there children at home have fought the leviathan and won. I am glad that the U.S. granted asylum to this family. Maybe citizen X can make it over to Morristown, TN and get an interview/concert out of them.