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Chain seeks state cash for ‘humanist schools’

Norway's largest private school chain has applied to open seven state-funded 'humanist' schools in the country, hoping to scoop up government funding available to Christian and Muslim religious schools.

Chain seeks state cash for 'humanist schools'
Akadamiet Bergen, the first of Akadamiet's private schools, opened in 2004. Photo: Akadamiet
Akadamiet, which launched with Akademiet Bergen in 2004 and now has six colleges, is jumping on the back of the approval won by Oslo's Humanistskolan, a junior high school founded by the University of Oslo research fellow Ole Martin Moen. 
 
Under Norway's education laws, private operators are only eligible for state funding for their schools if they can demonstrate a religious need for their school. 
 
Moen, whose 2012 PHD advanced hedonism as a life philosophy, successfully convinced Norway's Department of Education that parents with atheistic, humanist beliefs deserve to be treated the same as those with Christian or Muslim ones. 
 
However Norway's Christian Democrat party on Monday attacked Akadamiet's plans, arguing that its application was purely opportunistic. 
 
"All beliefs must be treated equally. However, these applications appear to be frivolous," the party's education spokesperson Anders Tyvand told Norway's NRK channel. 
 
He pointed out that the company had only last year applied to open a chain of government-funded Montessori schools on the same grounds. 
 
"It is not credible that they are first passionate Montessori advocates, and then suddenly burning for a humanist alternative," Tyvand said. "This is not about the parents' right to choose an alternative school for their children, which is the justification for the exemptions in the Act. These people simply want to run schools." 
 
Petter Arne Alvik, from Akademiet told NRK that his chain did indeed have strong humanist principles. 
 
"If we were just looking to run schools, could we simply have applied to start Christian private schools," he said. "That shows that we do not want to start schools at any cost, but only on the basis our principles." 

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Saxon wurst unwelcome at Nuremberg market

Nurembergers are fuming at a plan by the state of Saxony to give away free bratwurst at the world-famous Christ Child Christmas Market.

Saxon wurst unwelcome at Nuremberg market
The Christkindlesmarkt in Nuremberg. Photo: DPA

The meaty treats, often eaten three to a roll in Saxony, would be part of an advertising push for the Eastern state's many tourist attractions.

But the "That's the Saxon way" (So geht Sächsisch) campaign has raised Bavarian hackles.

"You're not allowed to give away goods for free" without special permission, market organizer Helmut Nordhardt told the Nürnberger Nachrichten.

And stallholders are up in arms at the prospect of having to compete with free giveaways at one of their busiest times of year – especially from out-of-state sausages.

A spokeswoman for the Saxon state government in Dresden said on Wednesday that they hadn't intended to cause such a fuss or undermine merchants' business.

The plan was originally intended to publicize speciality Saxon mustard from Bautzen under the motto "We bring spice into your life. Wherever you're from."

A small number of sausages garnished with the delicacy would have been grilled and given away in the city centre.

It's not yet known whether the wily Saxons will deploy their guerilla mustard marketing somewhere else in the city to seduce their cousins to the southwest.

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