CREATION OF A.I.E.J.I.
In the late 1940s the Cultural Division of the French High Commissioner’s
Office in Germany
assigned to H. Van Etten, Netherland, and H. Joubrel, France and Karl
Härringer, Germany, the responsibility to organize an international meeting on “ problems in the education of troubled
children and youth”.
The purpose of the meeting held in April
1949, was to promote in the aftermath of the war better understanding
between the French and the Germans working with troubled youth. While
originally the scope of the discussion involved only the German and
French individuals, several representatives
from other countries were later invited.
A second meeting took place in 1950 in Bad Durckheim, with a third
following a year later in Freiburg-im-Breisgau. In each of these previous
meetings the French Association of Educators brought enthusiasm to
the discussions which in turn motivated participants from other countries
to found similar organizations in their own country in support of
the educator philosophy as evidenced in France.
By the time that the fourth conference was held in Germany on March
19, 1951, it was becoming clear that such international meetings were
helpful in addressing the needs of young people. For this reason,
in the mountains near Freiburg-im-Breisgau at Schluchsee, the participants
organized the International Organization of Workers for Troubled Children
and Youth (A.I.E.J.I.) and elected a Dutchman, D.Q.R. Mulock Houwer,
who was then director of the “Zandbergen” schools in Amersfoort,
to become president. The infant association then had it headquarters
in the Netherlands.
The participants at Schluchsee not only organized and developed the
association now known as AIEJI; the also created the international
logo of the association, which is recognized throughout the world
today. Participants at the international meeting were struck by the
road signs frequently seen in the Black Forest area pointing out wild
animals crossings. They thought that the leaping doe, later promoted
to a gazelle with the addition of two horns on its head, evoked perfectly
the springing movement of the brand new AIEJI. They put it with the
Latin motto “in Libertate sursum”.
The world globe which serves as a background today to the gazelle
appears in the minutes of the III World Congress if AIEJI held in
Fontainebleau in 1956. At the time of the international association
there were affiliated national organizations existing in Belgium,
France, the Netherlands and Germany. Since that time, other national
associations have been created and have joined the international association
of AIEJI.
