Soviet Sweden? Parents Villainized Over Home-Schooled Son

Three years after Swedish authorities took Christer and Annie Johansson’s son for the “offense” of home schooling, some are likening the nation to the Soviet

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 24 February 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/
This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

 

HSLDA: Global Pressure on Parental Rights Mounting

Global Pressure on Parental Rights Mounting

Parents are threatened globally as Sweden persists in its hardline crackdown on homeschoolers and Canada prepares to pass a bill that would severely diminish homeschool freedom. Read more >>

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 24 February 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/
This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

Swedish home education leader goes into political exile: “The dangers for the family were too great.”

Riksföreningen för Hemundervisning i Sverige – Rohus

“In the end, the safety of my family could no longer be guaranteed. The threats from Uppsala municipality were too many, too brutal, and every invitation to dialogue was turned down. The actions of the Uppsala local government could hardly be interpreted in any other way than as a hidden message of deportation”, says Jonas Himmelstrand, President of the Swedish Association for Home Education (ROHUS), regarding the silent move of his family from Sweden to the Aland Islands, Finland, in a form of political exile.

The Himmelstrands have had a conflict with Uppsala municipality about the right to home educate for three and a half years. The top Municipal Commissioner, Ms. Cecilia Forss of the Moderate Party, is politically responsible and claims to be well familiar with the case. From the start the lawyer for the municipality chose an extremely restrictive interpretation of the school law. After two years of struggle the Himmelstrands finally got a leave of appeal at the Kammarrätten, the Swedish mid-level court, where the verdict was still pending when the Himmelstrands left Sweden. Even with this leave of appeal, Uppsala municipality still directed a modern form of political persecution of the family which escalated in the months before the family left Sweden.

In November 2011 the principal of the school that was enrolling the Himmelstrand’s youngest home educated son reported the parents to the local social authorities. The report was filed the day after Jonas Himmelstrand debated home education on national radio with the chair of the Educational Committee of the Swedish Parliament, Margareta Pålsson of the Moderate Party. It is not known whether these events were connected or not. The reporting principal had never met Mr. Himmelstrand or his seven-year-old son. However, she did know that the Himmelstrand family were already homeschooling their 13 year old daughter and had now filed the application forms to home educate their son.  The principal reported the parents to the social authorities stating in three sentences that she was concerned that the child was not in school. When directly questioned she said it was ”routine” to submit such a report. No higher official has yet responded as to the legal nature of this ”routine” report which appears to be calculated hostility towards the family.

Jonas Himmelstrand met with the social authorities without his son. The social worker was somewhat surprised at the minimal information the principal had provided and the fact that no meeting had taken place before the report was submitted.  The social authorities decided not to do any further investigation of the family. In their report they concluded that this was a question for educational law and not a matter for the social authorities. The Himmelstrands were lucky. Not everyone called to the Swedish social authorities has been this lucky. Every Swedish home educator knows about Dominic Johansson who was taken into custody for home educating. Before leaving the social services office, Jonas Himmelstrand asked if the safety of the family could be guaranteed while home educating in Sweden. He was told that if he wanted to home educate safely he should leave Sweden.

Just before Christmas the Children’s Board of the Uppsala municipality, led by Ms. Cecilia Forss, applied at court for a fine of $26,000 USD for home schooling one child, the Himmelstrand’s daughter, for the school year 2010-2011. According to ROHUS sources, this amount is nearly ten times higher than any homeschooling family has been assessed in recent years.  ”It is hard to interpret this excessive amount in any other way than as a punishment for being President for ROHUS and for my international criticism of Swedish family policies”, says Jonas Himmelstrand.

During 2011 Jonas Himmelstrand presented a critical view of Swedish family policies, based on his own research, in nine cities in eight countries on two continents, including the UN in New York. This was done in the role of family research expert at the Swedish family association Haro, and as the founder of the Mireja Institute, a Swedish secular pro-family think-tank. Jonas Himmelstrand is also the chairman of the board of the world’s first global home education conference, scheduled to take place in Central Europe in November 2012.

After being informed about the $26,000 USD fine, Jonas Himmelstrand wrote a sharply worded letter to Ms. Cecilia Forss and asked if she felt it was reasonable to devastate the financial stability of a family for the sake of a controversial political principle. Mr. Himmelstrand also wrote that he perceived the threat to the family of a sum which they could never pay to be a form of hidden deportation. Ms. Cecilia Forss chose not to answer the letter directly. However, two weeks later a letter arrived with another decision from the Children’s Board, again led by Ms.  Cecilia Forss, asking the court for a new fine for the current school year of approximately $15,000 USD.

”It is not possible to live in a country where leading politicians are ready to financially ruin a family for the sake of ideology, and threaten families with the sometimes incompetent, but always powerful Swedish social authorities. Beyond that, they have refused every invitation to meet and discuss the situation. It is not healthy to live under such stress,” says Jonas Himmelstrand.

The Himmelstrand family quietly left Sweden in early February and are today living on the Aland Islands in Finland, where home education is allowed under Finnish law. ”It is an incredible relief, and only now are we starting to understand the degree of pressure we have lived under for many years”, says Jonas Himmelstrand. ”At the same time it is an almost surreal experience to be forced to leave Sweden for an issue which in most of the democratic world, and by the UN, is regarded as a human right.”

The Himmelstrands are not alone in leaving Sweden and living in exile due to their desire to home educate. During the last two years about a dozen families have left Sweden for the same reason. ”We have several Swedish home educating families as neighbors on the Aland Islands,” says Jonas Himmelstrand.

Even if half of the board members now live in exile in Denmark and on the Aland Islands in no way will this diminish the work of ROHUS. ”In fact, we will be more effective when we do not feel our families are under threat”, says Jonas Himmelstrand.

Home education is regarded by the UN as a valid form of education under the concept of ”the right of education”. Home education is permitted in most of the world’s democracies with the exception of Germany (under their school law of 1938) and now Sweden. The research on home education shows excellent student results both academically and socially. Removing the choice to home educate must therefore be seen as an infringement on a human right.  Those who are punished for home education must be seen as politically persecuted, and those who are forced to emigrate as going into political exile.

To read this article to to:

http://www.mynewsdesk.com/se/view/pressrelease/swedish-home-education-leader-goes-into-political-exile-the-dangers-for-the-family-were-too-great-737463

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 24 February 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/category/all-about-education/

Help Stop Law Requiring Homeschoolers to Teach “Tolerance!”


J. Michael Smith is president of HSLDA. He has been an advocate for homeschooling for more than 30 years. Read more >>

J. Michael Smith says in the HSLDA E-lert

HSLDA of Canada is asking for our help! Our homeschooling brothers
and sisters to the north (Alberta) are facing the possibility that
they will be banned from teaching during schooltime that the Bible is
true. The law would require that homeschoolers’ academic content
contain politically correct views such as tolerance for controversial
lifestyles. Paul Faris, president of HSLDA of Canada, says the law
would subject homeschool families to the Alberta Human Rights Act
which has been used to target Christians and conservatives,
particularly those families with religious and traditional views about
homosexuality.

Paul is asking that homeschooling families across North America call
and email Alberta’s education minister and premier for one day only on
Friday, March 9, 2012.

This is our Saturday in New Zealand and the Southern Hemisphere. The contact details are here: http://www.hslda.org/elert/archive/2012/03/20120308154921.asp

Michael Smith goes on to say:

This is truly an international homeschool freedom issue that could affect our freedom in the U.S.! This approach to controlling homeschooling is gaining momentum in academic circles and in the media as discussed in HSLDA Chairman Mike Farris’s November 2010 Court Report cover story, “The Third Wave of Homeschooling Persecution.” In that article Mike writes:

“Now you understand what they mean to accomplish with mandatory teaching of tolerance. They aim to stop you from teaching your own children that Jesus is the only way to God. The American Bar Association (ABA) recognized all of this years ago in a book it published promoting the ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. According to the ABA, a church school that taught that other worldviews are unacceptable and that Jesus is the only way to God would be teaching lessons that ‘fly in the face’ of Article 29 of the CRC.”

The Third Wave has already reached homeschoolers in Alberta, Canada. We ask you to stand with them in such a time as this! Please pray throughout the day on Friday as the Lord leads you.

 

We greatly value you and your support—it is a privilege to serve you!  Read more here: http://www.hslda.org/elert/archive/2012/03/20120308154921.asp

 

Also read this report from LifeSiteNews Alberta readies to impose ‘diversity’ education on homeschoolers

http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/alberta-readies-to-impose-diversity-education-on-homeschoolers

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 24 February 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/category/all-about-education/

 


Home Schooled student honours his parents

Here is a home schooled graduate who praised his parents. They “received the MSOE Very Influential Person (VIP) Award based on his nomination. Bonnie and Wilson Gill Jr. are the first home-school educators to receive the award typically given to a high school teacher.” Wonderful to see a son honouring his parents in this way.

MSOE student gives hats-off to parents

Rick Wood

Logan Gill waves to his family Saturday as he leads the graduates into the winter commencement ceremony in Kern Arena at MSOE. Logan is the oldest of 17 children and was home-schooled by his parents.

One of 17 kids, son gives accolades to lifetime teachers

By Karen Herzog of the Journal Sentinel
Photo Gallery
Video

Logan Gill talks about his academic career at the Milwaukee School of Engineering.

For many college grads, commencement is all about them and their accomplishments.

Growing up in a family of 17 kids taught Logan Gill to share the stage.

On Saturday, the first Gill to graduate from college used his winter commencement ceremony at the Milwaukee School of Engineering to honor two teachers who taught him to be a motivated learner:

His parents.

Logan’s parents, who home-schooled him from third grade through high school, received the MSOE Very Influential Person (VIP) Award based on his nomination. Bonnie and Wilson Gill Jr. are the first home-school educators to receive the award typically given to a high school teacher.

Because he was home-schooled, Logan wrote, “My parents were responsible for all of my academic subjects, though as I got older, the responsibility of committing myself to learning these subjects was rightfully delegated to me.

“They provided the tools, but expected me to provide the perseverance.”

Bonnie and Wilson Gill Jr. walked across the stage, hand in hand, to accept an engraved plaque from MSOE President Hermann Viets. Then they quickly blended back into the crowd after their 17 kids stopped clapping, snapping pictures and grinning ear to ear.

Only someone watching closely would notice the couple clutched the plaque between them after they were seated, and the dad wiped a few tears from his eyes.

“Every parent instills in their children the best they can for the future,” the father said later. “This is a day of celebration for all the parents of MSOE graduates.”

Logan, a polite and well-spoken young man with a megawatt smile, earned a bachelor of science degree in business management. He was one of 54 who graduated Saturday at MSOE’s Kern Center.

Logan is the oldest of Bonnie and Wilson Gill Jr.’s 17 children, including four sets of twins.

All 17 kids have been – or still are – home-schooled by their parents.

Bonnie and Wilson Gill Jr. decided to home-school their children because they wanted them to learn in a spiritual environment.

For Logan, “it was a decision based on what would be best for his future, and for our future as a family,” said his father.

One bedroom of their nine-bedroom Milwaukee home was converted into a classroom as the family grew larger and there no longer was enough room around the kitchen table for all of them to study. The kitchen table grew larger, too, because family dinnertime was important.

Logan said he realized as a teenager that his parents not only are wise, but impressive.

“I feel so impressed and almost bewildered,” he said. “They work so hard and are very frugal. I don’t know how they managed it, but they did very well.”

The family is close-knit. Whenever the younger kids have trouble with a math problem, the older kids help.

“That’s pretty cool,” Logan said, making it clear he considers it an opportunity and not a burden.

“Most of us catch on pretty quickly. When we were younger and we had issues, my mom would deal with them. If it was math-related, Dad would help when he got home from work. Our parents would learn along with us.”

Logan lived at home throughout college and commuted seven minutes to the MSOE campus downtown because it didn’t make sense to pay room and board. He didn’t mind, he said. Quiet study time at home rarely was an issue, despite the house being filled with kids.

His sister Tierney and brother Christian now attend Wisconsin Lutheran College and live at home, too. Logan is the only one with his own bedroom.

The family of 19 shares two bathrooms.

“You have to get up at 4 a.m. on Sundays,” Logan said, referring to them all getting ready for church.

Big families learn to take turns.

They also become good problem-solvers.

When the whole family went to McDonald’s on Valentine’s Day, Logan realized 17 kids converging on a soda dispenser wasn’t a good idea. So he lined them all up, and they passed the cups down the line to their tables.

“When we’re on vacation, people ask how the little ones behave so well,” he said. “We’re very disciplined.”

It doesn’t hurt that they all studied martial arts.

“No family’s perfect,” Logan said. “There can be disagreements. But we don’t fight. Things are resolved quickly.”

Logan had plenty of pre-college practice at remembering important names and dates.

He can name all 16 siblings, in order, in a single breath. He knows their ages, too.

After Logan, who’s 22, come Tierney, 20, and Christian, 19.

Then there’s Micah, 18; Haleigh, 16; twins Aiden and Kiean, 15; Shepherd, 13; twins Rylie and Justus, 12; MacKenzie, 10; Noble, 9; twins Reagan and Jude, 7; Jeriah, 5; and twins Lukah and Eliah, 4. (That’s 12 boys, five girls.)

At Saturday’s commencement, MSOE reserved an entire section of chairs for the Gill family, up front.

There was no fidgeting during the 1 1/2 -hour ceremony, even among the littlest Gills.

Jude was unable to stifle a yawn near the end. But he was nobly attentive and smartly dressed in a crisp black suit with a white shirt and dark tie, just like his brothers.

Logan will continue at MSOE next quarter, taking a Japanese 3 class to delay the start of repaying $42,500 in college loans. He plans to start graduate school in the fall. He aspires to a career in politics or a job at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 24 February 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/category/all-about-education/