Publications:
Featured: Germany's Office for the Protection of the Constitution as an Instrument for Character Assassination - Concerning the Discussion on Scientology
Germany's Secret Service - A tale of treachery, corruption and character assassination
Ethnic Cleansing in Germany A Symposium
“Members of religious and ethnic minorities have been banned from political parties, dismissed from their jobs, excluded from professional and trade associations, denied bank accounts, ostracized in their communities, beaten up and subjected to other forms of discrimination solely because of their minority affiliation. And the German government has been either actively engaged in or tacitly consenting....”
Religious Apartheid 1997: Official Repression of Minority Religious Rights in Germany.
This report is made available by the Human Rights Office of the Church of Scientology. It was written by human rights counsel for the Church. It is a summary of the briefs presented on behalf of the Church of Scientology of Germany to the international human rights bodies, including the United Nations and the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe.
Artistic Freedom Threatened in Germany
The freedom to create and communicate an artist's vision free from state interference is the most cherished of all freedoms and the most fundamental of human rights. Yet, the German government continues its policy to blacklist artists on the basis of religious belief.
A Documented Reference Guide to Intolerance & Discrimination Against the Scientology Community in Germany Today
In January 1997, the United States State Department issued its annual human rights report and focused international attention on a nation few immediately associate with massive human rights abuses-Germany.
Restoring & Safeguarding Religious Freedom
How to protect your human rights in Europe A guide to protecting your human rights in Europe. Available in Danish English French German Italian Spanish Swedish.
What Religious Scholars Say About The Scientology Religion
The Church of Scientology has made history in the 1990s, and interest in the religion from all corners of the world continues to skyrocket. In 1993, the Internal Revenue Service of the United States acknowledged that the Church of Scientology International and more than 150 related churches and organizations were organized and operated solely for religious and charitable purposes. This made news around the world.