Children abandoned as Morocco deports adoptive parents

www.nrc.nl
17 March 2010

Children abandoned as Morocco deports adoptive parents

Published: 16 March 2010 09:30 | Changed: 17 March 2010 09:00

Last week, Morocco deported a large number of Christians on suspicion

of proselytizing.

By Gert van Langendonck in Rabat

Their only crime, Herman Boonstra said, was letting children read from

a children’s Bible. “Stories of Noah and the Ark and Jonas and the

whale. Stories that appear in the Koran as well.”

Last week, Boonstra and 15 other people working at the Village of Hope

orphanage in Ain Leuh, a town in the Moroccan Atlas Mountains, were

booted out of the country for suspected proselytizing. Elsewhere in

Morocco, Christians were also deported, including a “significant”

number of Americans, the US embassy reported.

Maxime Verhagen, the Dutch acting minister of foreign affairs,

immediately summoned the Moroccan ambassador to protest the

deportation of Boonstra and six other Dutch people. Confessional

parties have asked questions about the matter in the Dutch parliament.

33 children abandoned anew

On Friday evening, Boonstra and the other adoptive parents from the

Village of Hope appealed to the Moroccan king to “to act with mercy

and help us reach a point of compromise and reunite the 33 children

with the only parents they know,” Village of Hope’s website said.

For Herman and Jellie Boonstra, their deportation is a personal drama.

They had come to see the eight children they had taken in as their

own. The Village of Hope was not an everyday orphanage. Here, children

were adopted into real families. The Village was home to 33 children

in all, mostly abandoned by women who had become pregnant out of

wedlock. “They were our children; now suddenly they aren’t anymore,”

an emotional Boonstra said, speaking on the phone from Spain.

The proposition was risky to begin with: adoption is illegal in Muslim

countries. Something resembling it is allowed, a practice called

kafala in Arabic, but Christians are not eligible.

On the other hand, early this year Village of Hope was officially

recognised as a children’s care facility, which made the deportation

an even bigger surprise, Boonstra said. “We have always tried to be

clear. They knew exactly who we were and have not interfered with us

one bit for ten years. Now, suddenly they are treating us like

criminals and having us carried off under police escort.”

Practice, don't preach

Responding to the criticism, the Moroccan minister of communication,

Khalid Naciri, announced that Morocco would “continue to take stern

action against everyone belittling religious values.” According to

Naciri, Christians are free to practice their religion in Morocco, but

proselytizing will not be tolerated.

The minister of justice had earlier stated that the deported

foreigners had exploited the poverty of a number of Moroccan families

to convert minors to Christianity. In a joint statement, the Catholic

and evangelical churches of Morocco distanced themselves from the

deported Christians. Converting people in a relatively weak position

is a “deplorable practice,” according to the churches.

Jack Wald III, an American reverend with the protestant Rabat

International Church, said the deportations were indicative of a

policy shift in the government. Deportations of Christians are nothing

new in Morocco, “but we considered the deportations in 2009 as

anomalies,” said Wald, who was chairman of the Village of Hope’s board

until 2008. “This is different; this seems to be a coordinated

effort.”

Morocco has taken stern measures against Shia Muslims in the past, as

it has against Salafi and other strains of the Muslim faith at odds

with the official Moroccan variety of Islam: Sunni Malikism.

he Boonstra's and their adopted children. Photo Village of Hope website

Children abandoned as Morocco deports adoptive parents

Published: 16 March 2010 09:30 | Changed: 17 March 2010 09:00

The Moroccan constitution guarantees religious freedom, but Islam is

the official state religion and converting people to another one is

punishable under the law.

“The way it was done has been traumatic for the children: they have

been abandoned a second time,” said Wald. “It was a shameful act on

the part of the Moroccan authorities. What they're saying is that the

perceived threat from Christianity trumps the welfare of these

children."

Boonstra said he never intended to convert the children in his care.

“Of course they are more familiar with Christianity since they grew up

with us, but they got Koran lessons all the same. We have always tried

to make everything as Moroccan as possible. We have never held a

grudge against Muslims and still don’t. We have tried to uphold the

Dutch standard of care in Morocco, to show that things don’t have to

be the way they are in the official Moroccan orphanages, where

children have to share their beds with two others.”