International Homeschooling—Watch Video from a Dozen Countries

January 2, 2012

HSLDA and more than 100 homeschoolers from all over Europe gathered to encourage one another and discuss how they could work together for greater homeschooling freedom in Europe. Hailing from a score of countries and cultures and speaking many different languages, these homeschoolers nevertheless shared a strong goal to teach their children at home. Gathering in D’Ador, on the southern coast of Spain for a five-day conference in fall 2011, leaders and homeschooling families had a meaningful time.

Daragh McInerney, president of the Spanish homeschool association ALE and organizer of the conference, explains, “We hoped to provide a meeting place to share experiences and further our mutual knowledge of the home education scene in the various European countries. We’ve captured the presentations of many of homeschool leaders and have made these available with translations for all to enjoy.”

Speakers from countries including the United States, United Kingdom, Bulgaria, Sweden and Italy spoke about the common bonds and challenges homeschoolers share regardless of country or culture. Similar reasons for homeschooling included dissatisfaction with local schools, bullying or other peer issues, and the idea that families can better prepare children for the real world. Similar challenges shared by leaders included societal concerns about teacher training, academic performance and socialization. Many families spoke about the isolation they experience in countries where the homeschooling population is small, making a gathering like the Spain conference especially important.

“This conference was the single-largest gathering of Spanish homeschoolers to date,” notes Michael Donnelly, director of international relations at HSLDA. “It was also a great opportunity for European homeschoolers to spend time together for encouragement and to strategize. I am glad I could show support for our beleaguered brethren by representing HSLDA’s tens of thousands of members who care deeply about the serious challenges that homeschoolers around the world face—challenges we’ve had to overcome here in decades past.”

Click on the links below to listen to Mike Donnelly’s speech to European homeschoolers and presentations from nearly a dozen other international leaders sharing the story of homeschooling in their countries. To support HSLDA’s work in fighting for freedom for persecuted homeschoolers overseas consider a donation to the International Fund of the Homeschool Foundation!

Speeches by Donnelly and others can be found on Youtube.com or use the video links below.

From http://www.hslda.org/hs/international/Spain/201201020.asp

Video Presentations

Bulgarian Homeschooling
Peter Porumbachanov of the Bulgarian Homeschool Association discusses the situation for homeschoolers in Bulgaria at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

French Homeschooling
Agnès Ohlenbusch of Les Enfants d’Abord discusses the situation for homeschoolers in France at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

German Homeschooling
• Homeschool moms Karen Kern, Silke Ohlert, and Kelley Schwab discuss the situation for homeschoolers in Germany at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

Italian Homeschooling
Erika Di Martino of Controscuola.it discusses the situation for homeschoolers in Italy at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

Dutch Homeschooling
Peter Van Zuidam of Nederlandse Vereniging voor Thuisonderwijs discusses the situation for homeschoolers in the Netherlands at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

Polish Homeschooling
Mariusz Dzieciatko of Stowarzyszenie Edukacji w Rodzinie discusses the situation for homeschoolers in Poland at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

Portuguese Homeschooling
• Homeschool mom Claudia Sousa discusses the situation for homeschoolers in Portugal at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

Spanish Homeschooling
Daragh McInerney of the Asociación por la Libre Educación discusses the situation for homeschoolers in Spain at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

Swedish Homeschooling
Jonas Himmelstrand of Rohus discusses the situation for homeschoolers in Sweden at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011 (video begins after 09:15).

British Homeschooling
Shena Deuchars of Education Otherwise discusses the situation for homeschoolers in the United Kingdom at a conference in D’Ador, Spain in September 2011.

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From the Smiths:

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

Updated 10 December 2011: 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:

Gotland Court Refuses to Hear Transfer of Custody In the Case of Domenic Johansson

We’ve received news today that Gotland Courts have refused to grant a hearing on the transfer of custody of now 10 year old Domenic Johansson from his parents and to foster parents. During a December 9th preliminary hearing, the Johanssons and representatives of Gotland Social Services were asked to present evidence supporting or refuting the need for custody transfer. After reviewing all the evidence, news was recieved today that the presiding judge has determined there was not enough evidence suggesting Annie and Christer Johansson should permanently lose the custody of their son. To the best of our knowledge, this is the very first time in the 2.5 years of this battle, where the Johanssons were finally allowed representation in court by an attorney of their choosing, Ruby Harrold-Claesson.

While this latest court decision does not lift the ongoing LVU order, it is a very bright star in an otherwise bleak journey through the Swedish Social Services system. Now that a judge has finally heard and weighed evidence from all sides and has found the side of Gotland Social Services to be wanting in their case against the Johanssons, it is our hope that the dissolution of the LVU case will soon follow with Domenic placed back into his rightful position within the bossom of his family.

Click HERE to read background on this case.

Click HERE to read an open letter from Christer Johansson, Domenic’s father.

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From the Smiths:

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

Updated 10 December 2011: 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:

Open Letter From Grieving Father by Christer Johansson

Open Letter & Timeline

Open Letter From Grieving Father

by Christer Johansson

 

 

I’ve read the Discrimination Law, the Declaration of Human Rights, the European Convention, the Swedish Government Third Wave of Implementation of Human Rights and I have no other option but to conclude that our family is being gravely discriminated against by the Social Service on Gotland.

My name is Christer Johansson and I am the father of a bright, beautiful boy that has been broken into millions of pieces by the Social Services in Gotland Kommun. As perhaps you know, Domenic was taken from us in 2009 as we were on our way to India. This happened after a year of harassment and disputes over our right to educate Domenic at home. Once they took Domenic from us, we started a process of hearings and appeals to determine if we were fit parents and if Domenic was to live with us or with a foster family.

What follows is an account of some of the miscarriages of justice and blunt discrimination with which the Social Services approached our case from the very beginning. The social workers presented reports based on inventions and untruthful statements and they were not challenged by the lawyers that were supposed to defend us. Pure gossip was elevated to the status of science while sound statements by psychologists and doctors on the mental and physical health of the family were dismissed.

Just as an example, the Social Board asked the social workers at the beginning of the process about the grounds for taking custody from the parents and placing Domenic in foster care. Social worker Caroline Palmqvist stated that it was “on account of Christer’s mental health.” This was the first time any of us heard that my mental health was an issue. On no occasion before the moment they took my son from me had anybody within the system mention this. Now, I have proved twice and with sound reports from experts, that I do not have a mental health problem. I did suffer the trauma of suffering an earthquake and a robbery that almost took my life and took everything I had. That is different than having a mental disorder.

When mental health could not be pressed harder as a reason for justifying taking my son from me, they accused me of being a drug addict. I said, “Let me go and test myself.” Now in Sweden, to go and test yourself a Social Worker has to make the request. In this case it was the responsibility of Sofie Rosenquist to make such request. She did not do it, and she did not do it repeatedly forcing me to plea with the laboratory in charge of the testing to do it anyway. They did and it came back clean. I sent the results to Sofie Rosenquist who later on testified that I had not taken the test. Despite my complaints nobody in the court system followed up on her statement or on the laboratory.

All of a sudden I ceased being an issue and they focused on the fact that Domenic had been educated at home. It did not seem to matter that we won the case regarding homeschooling before Domenic was taken from us. It did not seem to matter that we have, in fact, registered Domenic in public school in Havdhem. It did not seem to matter that I was also invited to work there as I have been working as a teacher for many years…

Read more here: http://friendsofdomenic.blogspot.com/2011/12/open-letter-timeline.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+FriendsOfDomenicJohansson+%28Friends+of+Domenic+Johansson%29

 

TIMELINE

Fall of 2008: The Johansson’s (Christer and Annie) contact the Ministry of Education and after being told that they could homeschool and start the process amidst the obstruction of local school officials. They make the decision of homeschooling base on their plans to move to India in a few months and consider that this will ease Domenic’s (born 2002) transition and adjustment.
January 2009: After being fined and visited by social services on many occasions, Christer Johansson calls for meetings to discuss this matter, to no avail. The authorities decide that Domenic has to go to school.
February 11. 2009: The Child and education department orders the family to pay a fine of 250 SEK per day that Domenic is not at school. The Social Services intensify their pressure on the family. Homeschooling is still the only issue.
May 27th 2009: An action is taking to enforce the payment of the fine (Now 15.000 SKr). The court refused to enforce it because the school year is over – an implicit recognition of the right of the family to homeschool under the law at that time (it became illegal in July 2011). Christer Johansson informs the court of the family intention to move to India on June 26th. There is no court order or any other legal action taken to prevent the Johanssons from moving to India as was their plan.
June 25, 2009: Domenic and his parents are seated on the flight to India. Swedish police take Domenic from the plane. They alleged that there has been an anonymous report on the family (this has never been confirmed). The family cooperates. They are told that some social workers are going to talk to Domenic for a few minutes, they agree to let him go. The social worker takes Domenic from the airport. Annie collapses.
The Social Services agree to place Domenic with his uncle, Christer’s brother, Mike. The parents are told that they will be able to have Domenic back the following Monday. When they go to pick him up, they are told that they have found two cavities, that Domenic seems to be extremely shy and not behaving like a normal kid of his age, and they consider this to be evidence that there is a developmental problem. From here on there is reference to Domenic’s mental health. This time both Annie and Christer collapsed. Due to their physical and emotional reaction the social services decide to not allow them to see Domenic. They finally see Domenic 6 WEEKS later. In Christer’s words “he (Domenic) was broken in small pieces”
August 4th, 2009: First hearing.

Read more here: Read more here: http://friendsofdomenic.blogspot.com/2011/12/open-letter-timeline.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+FriendsOfDomenicJohansson+%28Friends+of+Domenic+Johansson%29

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From the Smiths:

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

Updated 10 December 2011: 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:

Domenic Johansson To Face Christmas Without Parents

Domenic Johansson remains separated from his parents, even as Swedish Social Services seek to remove all remaining parental rights.

Domenic, now 10 after his recent birthday, has been separated from his parents two and a half years, following his abduction by Social Services while seated in a commercial airliner with his parents awaiting departure on a flight to India.

Domenic is a citizen of India, and his mother’s family all live in India. However, Swedish Social Services in Domenic’s home town of Gottland decided to prevent the family’s departure in order to force the boy to attend their school.

The family had received no preliminary warning, nor they had been forbidden from leaving the country. They had also not been accused of breaking the law. Indeed, the only complaint the Swedish Social Services had against the family at the time was that they wanted to homeschool.

Throughout the ordeal the rights of the parents have not been respected and they have not even been allowed to choose their own legal representation.

The HSLDA and ADF have been trying to bring the case before the European Court of Human Rights. However, Social workers have been discussing allowing Domenic’s foster family to take him to visit Thailand while World Net Daily reported on 7 October that Gotland Social Services have been seeking to officially terminate all remaining parental rights.

Read more here  http://www.christianvoice.org.uk/?p=2172

Miscariage of Justice Continues in Johansson Case


A thriving Dominic is shown in a passport photograph, left, just before he was taken into custody by Swedish social-services agents. The right photo, obtained by the Dominic Johansson website, shows a “not-so-thriving Dominic” some months after he was forcibly placed in the Swedish foster-care system.

The fate of Domenic Johansson is still uncertain following a court hearing on 11 May. A new hearing has been scheduled for the end of the month due to Christer being unable to attend the one on 11 May.

A few weeks after the hearing a verdict will be issued determining whether Domenic is allowed to return to his parents.

Humanly speaking, it is unlikely that the hearing will change the status quo. Such meetings have been occurring every six months since Domenic was first snatched from his parents two years ago by the Swedish Social Services. So far each of these hearings have culminated in a negative verdict.

Once Domenic has been in state custody for three years, the review hearings will end and Domenic can be put up for adoption.

Neither of the parents have...Read More