The cabinet is investigating the consequences of exclusions of ex-members by closed religious groups. The reason is the policy of Jehovah’s Witnesses, who regard dropouts as apostates with whom contact must be broken.
The Scientific Research and Documentation Center is now going to investigate how big this problem is. Minister Franc Weerwind (Legal Protection, D66) wrote this to the House of Representatives on Tuesday.
The ministry will talk to the victims before the summer, Weerwind writes. According to the minister, exclusion in the current legislation “as a phenomenon as such is not punishable”. He does say that “certain harmful practices” can take their course through civil or criminal law, but that it is up to the judge to determine that.
Apart from the investigation announced by Weerwind, a foundation of former members wants to take the Jehovah’s Witnesses to court in a civil case. They also hope that justice will prosecute the community. Victims state that they have been ‘declared socially dead’ after their departure; all contact with friends, family and acquaintances is broken. The former members hope that the judiciary will prosecute the Jehovah’s Witnesses and force the judge to adjust the regulations.
A similar case took place in Belgium last year. There, Jehovah’s Witnesses were convicted of inciting discrimination. The community appealed, in which the judge will rule at the end of May.
Medieval
The VVD, PvdA and SP have been arguing for some time for an investigation into criminalization of the exclusion policy. Member of Parliament for the VVD Ulysse Ellian speaks of “impermissible practices”. Caroline van der Plas (BoerBurgerBeweging) describes the exclusions as ‘medieval situations’. Songül Mutluer (PvdA) calls the exclusion regime ‘discriminatory’, SP’er Michiel van Nispen thinks it is ‘mental abuse’.
Should the judiciary in the Netherlands proceed with an investigation, then according to professor of law and religion Paul van Sasse van IJsselt of the University of Groningen, this will be unique. “It would be the first time that a denomination or faith community has risked prosecution based on undesirable practices.”
Van Sasse van IJsselt states that religious organizations are not excluded from criminal or civil liability. He considers a civil case to be the most promising, because prosecution is “very complex and sensitive”.
Biblical Standards
In their own words, the Dutch Jehovah’s Witnesses have more than 29,000 members, spread over 353 congregations. The Orthodox community lives according to a strict interpretation of the Bible and tests it against its own legal system.
In response to criticism, board member Michael van Ling states that the community only excludes baptized members if they make a habit of “breaking biblical standards and being unwilling to change. This is based on biblical principles. All Jehovah’s Witnesses agree to live by those standards when they choose to be baptized.”
In 2020, the community came into the limelight for an investigation into the handling of sexual abuse complaints. According to the researchers, three quarters of the victims of incest, assault, rape or sexual harassment were dissatisfied with the handling of the complaint. Only 27 percent reported the incident to the police. An investigation is now underway into the possibilities of a statutory obligation to report.
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