By Doug McKelway
 
(FoxNews.com) While the White House and many lawmakers push to grant legal status to 
immigrants who crossed the border illegally, the Romeike family thought they 
followed the rules -- but now face deportation.
They are devout Catholics who emigrated from Germany in 2008 to home school 
their six children in Tennessee. As Uwe Romeike told Fox News, it is illegal to 
do that in Germany.
"We don't have the freedom to home school our children in Germany," Romeike 
told Fox News.
The U.S. granted the Romeikes political asylum, but in 2010 the Justice 
Department intervened, ruling that home-schooling could not be used as grounds 
to seek citizenship.
The department has ordered the Romeikes be deported. "Now it means same thing 
as in Germany," Uwe Romeike said with a chuckle.
The family is appealing the ruling. Their case set for April 23 before the 
6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.
The Home School Legal Defense Association will represent them. It sees their 
denial of asylum as a fundamental threat to freedom. "In this particular case 
there is an equivalency between human rights standards and our constitutional 
rights. If our government takes the position that home-schooling is not a human 
right for the Romeike case to give them the basis of asylum, then it may not be 
a constitutional right for them as well," said Michael Farris of the HSLDA.
Immigration experts differ as to whether the Romeike's situation meets the 
criteria for asylum here.
David Abraham, a professor at the University of Miami Law School, said: 
"Germany, a democratic country, has chosen not to permit home schooling as one 
of the options. Germans have a chance to change that through their legislature. 
In the meantime, it doesn't exist and it is not persecution."
But Thomas Dupree, a Bush administration Justice Department lawyer disagrees. 
"The administration has a wide variety of options at their disposal that range 
from granting asylum to deferring any kind of action to remove these people," he 
said.
A petition on the White House website to grant the family permanent legal 
status has garnered over 100,000 signatures -- a threshold that typically 
triggers comment from the administration.  A recording on that website tells 
visitors, "If a petition gets enough signatures White House staff will review 
it, ensure it's sent to the appropriate policy experts, and issue an official 
response."
Home-schoolers in Germany face not just fines, but the potential removal of 
children from their parents' custody. That is a level of punishment the Romeikes 
say rises to persecution.
1 comment:
Illegal Aliens, Criminals, Mexican Mafia Drug Cartel Murderers and their families are welcome in America; this country was founded by Freemasons.
Do you think anything good and holy is welcome here?
Even the Virgin Mary had to go to Mexico to appear to a law abiding Mexican.
*
Post a Comment