Second Thought

Looking again at news and commentary

The Christian Science Monitor

From The Christian Science Monitor, by Francine S. Kiefer, November 6, 1989

"E. Germany Shows Signs of Greater Religious Tolerance"

"In a time of increasing religious tolerance in East Germany, the authorities have lifted a 38-year ban on the Christian Science Church.

"On Friday, at an East Berlin meeting with church representatives, they officially recognized the denomination. The first Christian Science Society, meanwhile, has been established in East Berlin.

"'Christian Science was banned in 1951, when Stalinism was especially strong,' says Dieter Förster, a church spokesman in West Germany.

"Churches in general had a difficult time during the 1950s and '60s.

"'The Communist Party believed Christianity would die out and they wanted to speed up this process,' says Dietrich Ritschl, chairman of the theology department at the University of Heidelberg in West Germany.

"Small churches, and those with Western connections, had a particularly rough time though only three denominations were banned outright by the government.

"Although the German Lutheran Church—the leading denomination in East Germany—survived this period, it was restricted to activities 'only within the church walls,' Mr. Ritschl says.

"'To be a member of any church meant ostracism at work and in social life,' he added.

"Christian Science got its start in Germany in the late 1890s in Dresden, today part of East Germany, and in Hannover, West Germany.

"It was banned during Adolf Hitler's Third Reich, and after the second ban under communism, followers tried numberous times to apply for reinstatement of the denomination....

"According to Mr. Förster, three services were scheduled over the weekend and today in Leipzig, Erfurt, and Karl-Marx Stadt. The services were to be held in Mormon and German Lutheran church buildings. He expects that Christian Scientists in East Germany will hold 'informal' services as a first step toward forming branch churches.

"Over the last few years, East Germany has taken a more liberal view of organized religion.

"'We think things are developing so that we will be able to work there,' says Karin Nowosatka of the Salvation Army, which is still banned in East Germany. 'At the Salvation Army's meeting of European leaders this month,' she says, 'reentry to East Germany will be a key topic.'"

Reprinted by permission from The Christian Science Monitor. Copyright © 1989 The Christian Science Publishing Society. All rights reserved.

January 29, 1990
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