Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Morocco Deports Foreigners Living At Orphanage For Christian Proselytizing
Yesterday's Los Angeles Times reports that 16 foreign nationals who were part of the Village of Hope orphanage in the town of Ain Leuh were deported from Morocco last week for proselytizing. Apparently the charges were filed in part because the children at Village of Hope were reading Bible stories from a children's Bible. The 33 children at the orphanage were living in family units with different adult couples there. The government claims the foreigners exploited poverty-stricken families in order to convert their children to Christianity. Morocco's minister of communication, Khalid Naciri, said the country would "continue to take stern action against anyone who toys with the religious values" of the nation, whose official religion is Islam. Herman and Jellie Boonstra, a Dutch couple who lived at the orphanage had eight children in their care. Herman says that while the children were familiar with Christianity because they grew up with the Christian family, he did not intend to convert them.