The territory of the former Alsace-Lorraine, commonly known as Alsace-Moselle,[1] a part of France that was part of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918 (and then from 1940 to 1944–1945), consisting of the départements of Haut-Rhin and Bas-Rhin (both of which make up Alsace), and the département of Moselle (itself being the north-eastern part of Lorraine), maintains for historical reasons its own local law and applies specific customs and laws on certain issues. This happens in spite of its being an integral part of France, and notably concerns those issues, where France adopted a standard or principle in the period 1871–1919.
The region is also notable for the large number of mother-tongue High German dialect speakers (Alsatian, a dialect of Upper German, in Alsace; and several Frankish dialects of West Middle German in Moselle), although the number of native speakers has dwindled significantly since the Second World War, and French is now paramount in these regions. Moreover, Protestantism remains a major part of the religious landscape in Alsace.
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The local law (fr: droit local) in Alsace-Moselle is a legal system which preserves, in the formerly annexed and reverted territories, the provisions made by the German authorities when they are considered more favourable to the inhabitants.
Created in 1919 after the end of WWI, it includes:
A Commissaire de la République, whose duty was to restart the French administration, had to choose between local law and general law. These provisions were supposed to be temporary (some texts are still in German language). Two laws of June 1, 1924 made them permanent[2].
The most striking of the legal differences is the absence of separation of church and state — even though the constitutional right of freedom of religion is guaranteed. Alsace-Moselle is still under the pre-1905 regime established by the Concordat, which provides for the public subsidy of the Roman Catholic Church, the Lutheran Church, the Calvinist Church and the Jewish religion as well as public education in those religions (parents may refuse religious education for their children). Clergy for these religions are paid by the state; Catholic bishops are named by the President of the French Republic on the proposal of the Pope. The public University of Strasbourg has courses in theology and is famous for its courses on Protestant theology.
Those dispositions are unusual in a country where Church and State are more strictly separated than in most other countries. Controversy erupts periodically on the appropriateness of these and other extraordinary legal dispositions of Alsace-Moselle. Periodically, freethinker groups contend that this public funding of certain religions should stop. Others[3] argue that, nowadays, the second largest religion in France is Islam and that Islam should thus enjoy comparable status with the four official religions. Despite the controversy, the status quo continues to persist.
Another difference is that in Alsace-Moselle, trains run on the right of the double tracks, as in Germany, whereas the normal rule in France is on the left.
Since the end of the last century, some local provisions of the local law have been incorporated in the general law (e.g.: social security, personal bankruptcy, social aid).
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