The son of Freedom is a small group different from the religious school called Doukhobors. This enthusiastic and reconstructive branch evolved from Doukhobors only to attract government attention to extreme extremism. They began explosion, arson, naked march, hunger strike, protested Canadian land ownership and registration law. This obscene or violent demonstration between the sons of Freedom and the Canadian Government's legislation caused many of the conflicts, but also caused a lot of public dissatisfaction. But should Canadian nations impose a law on this minority group in intense conflict?
1895: Christian school Doukhobors, a pacifist of the Russian empire, tried to undergo a series of laws and regulations by the Russian government. Most of them are active in the South Caucasus, and in 1887 they introduced a military complete recruitment, but controversy still remains. They also refused to swear allegiance to emperor Nicholas II of New Russia. According to further indications of exile leader Peter Vasilievičy Wie in Beijing, the three states of the Dhobobir transgender, as a sign of absolute pacifism, decided to destroy their weapons. June 18, 1895 (Gregorian calendar on November 10, 1895) In the Dobobol school in 1895, the night when they gathered was sung poetry and spiritual songs, burned, then arrested and beaten at the government Cossack. Shortly, Cossack was imprisoned in many village big party Doboball factions, they were distributed in more than 4,000 residents in the village of the rest of Georgia.
In Canada, 1917 wartime election law, some religious organizations (Mennonite, Kazakhstan mission, Dobo ball school) are the main reason deprived of military service opposition right. It was deprived of the rights at the end of World War I ended with the 1955 update of the Dobools, but since 1934 (according to Dominion election law). In 1866, the first Constitution of the modern Romanian said in Article 7 that only Christians could become citizens of Romania. Romanian Jews are declared stateless. Under pressure from the Peace Conference in Berlin in 1879, this one was amended to grant Non-Christians the right to become a citizen of Romania, but naturalization was granted on a case-by-case basis and Congressional approval necessary. The application will take ten years to complete. The new constitution was enacted until 1923, and that article 133 extended Romanian citizenship to all Jewish residents and gave equal rights to all Romanian citizens.