- In October 2002 a senior German court whose 1995 ruling has been continuously relied on by the German government to justify discriminating against members of the Church of Scientology in Germany has now ruled that Church staff members work for idealistic purposes and spiritual improvement and that no employer-employee relationship exists.
- The Federal Labor Court in Erfurt in central Germany ruled against a former member of the Church of Scientology in Berlin who had sought to use a 1995 interim decision by the Court to claim that the Church owed him 320,000 Euros in backlogged wages. When challenged by American officials, human rights bodies and media, German officials have repeatedly cited the 1995 decision as defense for their human rights violations against Scientologists – despite more than 35 decisions by other German courts recognizing Scientology as a religion. The Church has documented more than 1,500 governmental violations of its parishioners’ rights in Germany, many described at http://humanrights-germany.org.
- The Court has now rendered its previous decision useless for German officials by ruling that “the plaintiff [Church worker] was not following with his activities the aim of gainful employment, but was seeking idealistic purposes and his own spiritual perfection through the teachings of Scientology.” The Court pointed out that Church of Scientology workers enjoy freedoms not normally part of an employer-employee relationship, such as the right to contribute to the creation of church activities.
- The Court cited a landmark decision of November 1997 by Germany’s Federal Administrative Court. Ruling in favor of a Mission of Scientology in Stuttgart and against the government of the German state of Baden-Württemberg, the court held that Scientology’s religious practices are intended for spiritual gain and have no commercial purpose.
- Commenting on this week’s decision, Church of Scientology President Heber C. Jentzsch said: “For seven years the German government has cited that single 1995 Federal Labor Court ruling to the exclusion of dozens of others in our favor, to justify continuing violations of the rights of German Scientologists. Now the very Court the government has consistently relied on has acknowledged that dedicated church staff are motivated by idealistic and spiritual aims. The government has no arguments left. I urge German officials to live up to the democratic principle of respect for religious belief and end the discrimination against Scientologists."
- The U.S. State Department’s International Religious Freedom Report, released earlier this month, again criticized the German government for discriminating against Scientologists. Also this month, three members of churches of Scientology in Germany filed a formal complaint against Germany to the United Nations Human Rights Committee over their exclusion from a mainstream political party in Germany solely because of their religion.
- Scientology has been officially recognized as a religion in countries including the United States, Sweden, Portugal, South Africa and Australia. As the complaint notes, hundreds of administrative and judicial decisions, including in Germany, have acknowledged Scientology as a religious community.
With a population of 222 million, Indonesia is the fourth most populated country in the world. And if there were a competition for the most dangerous place to live, when it comes to natural disasters it would rank right up there at the top of the list.
The December 2004 tsunami brought this fact home to the world. Anyone with a TV set or access to the Internet was engulfed by the images of the devastation: more than 170,000 dead in a matter of minutes; millions displaced from their homes; loss in property or possessions incalculable; an entire population affected by the loss.
Within days of the disaster, hundreds of Scientology volunteers arrived in Medan, the capital of the province of North Sumatra. Led by an experienced team of Australian Scientology Volunteer Ministers, several hundred Scientologists from around the world formed into the Scientology Disaster Relief Team. First order of business—help the rescue workers, identify the bodies, deliver water, food and blankets to those who survived.
With the most urgent and life-threatening needs attended to, the Scientology volunteers began concentrating on the service based on Scientology principles. These techniques have become the hallmark of the program—they helped those affected by the disaster recover from the effect of injury, trauma and loss, using techniques, developed by L. Ron Hubbard, called Scientology assists. They also trained doctors, nurses, Muslim clerics and family members, using the Scientology Handbook . They in turn brought help to survivors, and so touched the lives of hundreds of thousands in desperate need to help.
When The Scientology Volunteer Ministers packed up and returned home, they left behind a team of local volunteers whom they trained and formed up into the Scientology Assist Team of Medan, Indonesia.
So it was that in May 2006, when Yogyakarta was struck by a magnitude 6.3 earthquake, members of the the Medan Scientology Assist Team were already on hand when Scientologists from Australia, the United States and Europe flew in to help. The team provided urgently needed help in hospitals that were so overcrowded that parking structures had been turned into makeshift wards to care for those injured by the disaster.
And again in July 2006 when Java was shaken by a magnitude 7.7 quake, once again the Scientologists trained thousands of Indonesians to deliver Scientology assists.
By the end of August 2006 the Scientology volunteers trained more than 10,000 Indonesians who in turn have helped hundreds of thousands more.
The legacy of the Scientology Volunteer Ministers continues to this day, with active members of the Scientology Disaster Relief Team on call throughout the country to help in times of need.
For more information about Scientology, visit the Scientology Video Channel or the online version of the book What is Scientology?


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[...] News by LuSmyths [...]
This is very commendable to Eric and Gloria. Do you perhaps have photos? I would really like to see these too.
Got one from scientologytoday.org and putting it in!