Religious freedom in Modern Germany:
A Review of Constitutional Provisions
Debarati Halder* and K. Jaishankar**
Abstract
The
modern German constitution differs from other constitutions of the European
Union in guaranteeing a broader religious freedom which includes almost all the
basic rights. Constitutional provisions guaranteeing of faith, creed,
conscience, right to education, freedom of movement, right to choose career of
one’s own choice co relates to one’s belief in a particular religion. But in
reality how far the constitutional guarantee of basic rights which orbits
around the notion of religious freedom is applied to multi ethnic society in
Keywords
Introduction:
Freedom
of religion in modern
This article tries to search how far and to
what extent the religious freedom in German constitution protects the interest of
multi religious German society. The authors have divided the article into four parts;
the first discusses about the character of secularism present in Germany, the
second part discusses about the constitutional provisions dealing with
religious freedom in Germany, the third part discusses the judicial decisions
on cases of religious freedom in modern Germany and the fourth part shows the
developments that have occurred in regard to religious freedom in modern
times.
Part I
Camouflaged secularism:
Modern constitutions of the world have
guaranteed freedom of religion in various ways. There is the laïcist solution
of
Art 4 of the German constitution:
A brief
analysis of Art 4 of the German constitution would show that freedom of
conscience, of faith and belief makes the basis for almost all the basic
rights. Thus it could be seen that Art 4
guarantees freedom of creed ,of conscience, and freedom to profess a religious
or non religious faith, which is related to right to equality , human dignity,
right to expression and the right to choose occupation of one’s own choice;
again, undisturbed practice of religion is guaranteed which relates to freedom
of expression and then lastly, Art 4 correlates to freedom of occupation where
by it is told that no one may be compelled against his conscience to render war services involving the use of
arms.
The
case of Rumpelkammer :
Religious
freedom in post Nazi Germany was explained finely in the case of Rumpelkammer.
[vii]”.The
controversy concerned a Roman Catholic youth organization that actively sought
to practice its faith as a missionary in society, trying to realize the ideal
of daily life lived by good deed. At issue was the group’s collection of used
clothes, paper, and other recyclable goods for the purpose of raising money,
which it then donated to charitable causes dedicated to the relief of hunger
and misery in underdeveloped countries. To further this effort, the group
enlisted the pulpit, calling on priests to urge parishioners to donate to the
cause. These activities raised the ire of a commercial rag dealer, who
complained that the group’s activities illegally competed with his business,
which suffered. The lower courts agreed, enjoining the youth organization from
engaging in its clothing drive. The
Part II
Constitutional provisions guaranteeing religious
freedom:
The German
constitution opens with guaranteeing the basic rights in Chapter One. Guarantee
of religion finds an important place in the constitution which is interrelated
with almost all the basic rights. Arts 3, 4 and 7of the German constitution
speaks of religion and religious rights. Art 3 guarantees equality to all, Art
4 emanates the broad rights of preaching, practicing and believing religion of
one’s own choice and Art 7 mentions in part right to follow and attend religion
classes. A broad study of Chapter One would show that the basic rights in
German constitutions are interrelated to the concept of religious freedom and
secularity. But the question arises as to how far in reality religious freedom
is accepted in modern
Human dignity and religion in
The chapter of Basic Rights opens with
right to human dignity to every German and guarantees that the basic rights are
binding on the legislature, executive and judiciary as directly enforceable by
law[ix].
The constitution guarantees every one free development of his personality,
right to life and personal integrity in so far as he does not violate the right
of others[x] and
finally in the equality clause under Art 3 it says all humans are equal before
the law and then again reiterates the same principle broadly in Art 3(3) by stating that no one may be disadvantaged or favored
because of his sex, parentage , race ,
language , homeland and origin, his handicap, political ideologies and finally
because of his faith or religion. Thus it could be seen, impliedly the German
constitution guarantees the basic human rights to every man and woman
irrespective of their religion and the equality clause establishes the liberal
attitude of
Again, every German has right to freely
express his opinion in writing, speech and pictures[xi].
Freedom of expression is assured to preachers of religion under Art 4 which
accepts right to profess religious or nonreligious ideas as inviolable. It
could be seen freedom of religion is interrelated to right to marriage and
family[xii]
also. . all German residents are free to choose their spouses irrespective of
their cast or creed and parents’ right to up bring their children according to
their religious faith is protected by the constitution. In other words,
minority rights in Germany are well protected which marks the difference line
between the Nazi Germany and post world war , post unification modern Germany .
Education and freedom of
religion:
Religion forms a quintessential part of
education in
The second part of Art 7 guarantees the
right to establish private schools as a substitute for state schools. Private
schools need the approval of the state when they satisfy certain conditions
like they are not inferior to state schools in their academic aims, their
facilities, professional training of their staff , pupils are not segregated
according to their parent’s monetary conditions (Art 7/4), thus giving a strict
guideline for equality clause for the establishment of the private schools.
Again the constitution permits the establishment of primary elementary schools
where the education authority finds that it serves special pedagogic interest,
or on the interest of the guardians it is to be established as an
interdenominational school based on a particular religious or nonreligious
faith and where a state elementary school of this type doesn’t exist in the
commune. (Art 7). It is evident from analyzing the right to education under the
German constitution that the makers of modern German constitution viewed both
impartiality to individual’s religious faith and importance of the religious
belief as two pillars to build modern
Free movement and right to
religion:
Freedom of movement implies three
particular freedoms namely freedom of assembly[xiii],
association[xiv] and
the freedom of movement[xv].
Right to free practice of religion would be meaningless if there is no
guarantee for right to free movement. It could be seen that the German
constitution in Art 8 guarantees right to assemble without prior notification
or permission, provided the assembly is peaceful, unarmed and not in open air.
Clause 2 deals with open air assemblies where the right may be restricted by a
statute or pursuant to a statue. Thus it could be seen that Art 8 is a
defensive right and it benefits dissident minority the right of self
determination, as to the place, point in time and content of an event. At the
same time it forbids state’s compulsion to take part in a public event or to
stay away from it.
Art 9 again specifically mentions freedom
of associations; all Germans have the right to form clubs and societies. Even though
the right to form association here is mentioned as a right to protect economic
conditions and the improvement of working atmosphere, in general, right to form
association is inseparable from right to assemble and thus right to practice
religion as a community. But “It is the task of fundamental rights to secure an
independent sphere of action for each societal subsystem. Therefore, the
guarantee of freedom of religion can only reach as far as the exertion of faith
does not encroach upon the activities of the other social spheres”[xvi].
Hence the German constitution guarantees every right
including the freedom of religion with a restriction clause. Thus Right to
association like the right to assemble is restricted to constitutional
provisions.; these are i) when the purpose and activities of the association
conflict with criminal statutes, ii) when they are directed against
constitutional order and iii) against
concept of international understanding.
Freedom of assembly, association and
freedom of movement are interrelated. Art 11 of the constitution depicts that
all Germans enjoy freedom of movement through out the territory. Analyzing
these three basic rights it could be seen German right of religion is
safeguarded in most liberal way. Every one thus has a right to assemble for his
own religious purpose, can create religious association and can have access to
any religious place of worship. At the same time, no one may be discriminated
for his religion from his right to reside in any part of
Right to choose occupation
and freedom of religion:
The basic right to work is guaranteed in
both Art 4 as well as Art 12 of the German constitution. The right Art 4 the
constitution is both positive and negative. Firstly, it states that everyone
has a right to choose occupation as a preacher of religious or nonreligious
faith; secondly, no one may be compelled against his conscience to render war
services involving the use of arms.[xvii]
This is a negative right forbidding the state authorities to force individuals
to engage them in war services.
Art 12 again reiterates that all Germans
have the right to freely choose their occupation, their place of work and their
place of study or training. No person may be forced to perform a work of a
particular kind except a particular framework of a traditional compulsory
community service that applies generally and equally to all; and finally forced
labor may be imposed only by court sentence. Art 12a while specifying the liability
to military and other services points out that every German has to compulsorily
serve in the military for one year but every one simultaneously has a right to
refuse to render any service involving war and use of arms and they can
substitute the said service in the health system, civil defense or the military
hospital organization.[xviii]
In other words, both clause III of Art 4
and clause II of Art 12a speak the same right to refuse to work involving arms.
The constitution through these two provisions puts a bar on the state to compel
any person to take occupation against his conscience.
Freedom of religion and neutrality:
The concept
of religious freedom in German constitution has created numerous questions as
to the neutral character of German constitution.” Well known decisions of the
Part III
Recent
judgments on religious freedoms:
From the above analysis it could be seen
German constitution gives a wider view to the personal faith and religion of
every gunman citizen. All most all the basic rights of life are guaranteed
considering the freedom of faith, creed and caste of the citizens. Religious
identity of every German is secured in a peaceful way in modern
The head scarf case:
The head scarf case[xxiii]
is an important milestone in the German constitutional history for the issue of
freedom of religion.
In 2002, the
The Federal Interior Ministry's 1995
immigration exclusion (refusal to issue a visitor's visa) continues in force
against the founder of the
The
case of Jehovah's Witnesses:
A 10-year legal effort by Jehovah's
Witnesses to overturn a
In 2004, the Church of Scientology, which
operates 18 churches and missions, remained under observation (as it has been
since 1997) by the federal and seven state Offices for the Protection of the
Constitution (OPCs), out of concern that the Church's teachings and practices
are opposed to the democratic constitutional order or violate human rights. In
deciding whether to observe an organization, OPC officials collect publicly
available information, mostly from written materials and from public events, to
assess whether a "threat" exists. In addition, OPC staff and law
enforcement officials have also directly approached Scientologists for
information, a practice many find intimidating and a form of harassment. More
intrusive observation methods are subject to legal checks and would require
evidence of involvement in treasonous or terrorist activity.
In November 2004, a
Several states have published pamphlets
about Scientology (and other religions) that detail the Church's ideology and
practices. States defend the practice by noting their responsibility to respond
to citizens' requests for information about Scientology as well as other
issues. While many of the pamphlets are factual and relatively unbiased, some
warn of alleged dangers posed by Scientology to the political order, the free
market economic system, and to the mental and financial well being of
individuals”[xxx].
Part IV
Developments in religious
freedom for the minorities in
Even though questions of partiality had
arisen in
After 2003, the
Further, on January 27, 2003 German
Chancellor Gerhard Schröder signed the first-ever agreement on Federal level
with the Central Council, so that Judaism was granted the same elevated,
semi-established legal status in Germany with the Roman Catholic and the
Evangelical Church in Germany at least since the Basic Law for the Federal
Republic of Germany of 1949.A flagship moment for the burgeoning Jewish
community in modern Germany occurred on November 9, 2006 (the 68th anniversary
of Kristallnacht), when the newly constructed Ohel Jakob synagogue was
dedicated in Munich, Germany This is particularly crucial given the fact that
Munich was once at the ideological heart of Nazi Germany, the city that
contributed more than any other to the rise of Hitler and Nazism.[xxxiii]
Conclusion:
The modern German constitution
ensures restricted religious freedom for its non Christian citizens. Islam,
Judaism, Hinduism and other minority religions still await full secular support
from the government. The present German constitution differs from all other
constitutions of the European Union in broadly defining the religious freedoms
and guarantees. But certain provisions like basic right to education, freedom
of expression, right to equality need to be analyzed with a broader scope.
[i] Art 4 of the German constitution
[ii] the preamble to the Indian constitution says
[iii] Art 4 of the German constitution
[iv] Art 7 of the German constitution
[v] German Law Journal No. 2 (
[vi] Art 7 (3) of the German constitution
[vii] BVerfGE 24, 236 (1958).
[viii]RESEARCH PAPER
02;Free Exercise of Religion in
Professor of Law
[ix] Art 1 of the German constitution
[x] Art 2 of the German constitution
[xi] art 5 of the German constitution
[xii] Art6 of the German constitution
[xiii] Art 8
[xiv] Art 9
[xv] Art 10
[xvi] German Law Journal No. 2 (
[xvii] Clause III of Art 4 of the German constitution
[xviii] Art 12a of the German constitution
[xix] German Law Journal No. 2 (
*The
Crucifix case (93 BVerfGE 1; see also the judgement pronounced after the
new legislation, i.e. the introduction of the objection principle
(Widerspruchslïsungï), of the Bundesverwaltungsgericht, Neue Juristische
Wochenschrift 3068 (1999); see further the decision by the Bayerischer
Verfassungsgerichtshof, Deutsches Verwaltungsblatt 1195 (1997); discussed
by Ludwig Renck, Neue Juristische Wochenschrift 994 (1999). See generally
Peter Badura, Das Kreuz im Schulzimmer, Bayerische Verwaltungsblïtter 33
(1996); critical from a communitarian perspective Winfried Brugger, Zum
Verhïltnis von Neutralitïtsliberalismus und liberalem Kommunitarismus.
Dargestellt am Beispiel des Kreuzes in der Schule, in: Der Streit um das
Kreuz in der Schule 109 (Winfried Brugger/Stefan Huster eds., 1998); for
another critical perspective see Ronald Pofalla, Kopftuch ja Kruzifix
nein? Zu den Widerspr�chen der Rechtsprechung des BVerfG, Neue
Juristische Wochenschrift 1218 (2004).), and the Head scarf case (BVerfGE 108,
282; on this see Christoph Gusy, Kopftuch Laizismus Neutralitït,
Kritische Vierteljahresschrift F Gesetzgebung Und Rechtswissenschaft 153
(2004).; Ute Sacksofsky, Das Kopftuch von der religisen zur fïderalen
Vielfalt, Neue Juristische Wochenschrift 3297 (2003); Christine
Langenfeld/Sarah Mohsen, Germany: The Teacher Head Scarf Case,
International Journal Of Constitutional Law 86 (2005)are the two most important
cases in the issue of German religious freedom.
[xx] RESEARCH PAPER 02;Free Exercise of
Religion in
[xxi] Friedhelm Kraft: Muslim Children and the “right to religion” the
long road to Islamic instructions in state schools in
www.feslondon.org.uk/documents/IslamicEducationinGermanStateSchools_000.pdf
[xxii] www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2005/51554.htm
[xxiii] BVerfGE 108, 282
[xxiv] :“German States Move To Enact Headscarf
Bans”(“Deutsche Welle,”
[xxv] ibid
[xxvi] International Religious Freedom Report 2005 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2005/51554.htm
[xxvii] ibid
[xxviii] ibid
[xxix] ibid
[xxx] ibid
[xxxi] International Religious Freedom Report 2006 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2006/71382.htm
[xxxii] ibid
[xxxiii] History of the Jews in
____________________________________________________________________________ABOUT
THE AUTHORS
* Debarati Halder is
an Advocate presently working as a Research Assistant in the International
Cyber Bullying Research Project at the Department
of Criminology and Criminal Justice,
**Dr. K.
Jaishankar is a Lecturer in the Department of Criminology and Criminal
Justice,
Url: http://www.drjaishankar.co.nr Email: debajai@hotmail.com