14 Church Members Guilty In Death Of Young Girl Over Withheld Insulin
In Toowoomba, Australia, a court convicted 14 members of a Pentecostal sect for the manslaughter of an eight-year-old girl, who died after being denied insulin due to religious beliefs.
In a tragic incident, the child’s medical needs were ignored based on the faith that prayer could heal her condition, the Christian Post reported.
Elizabeth Rose Struhs, just 8 years old, tragically died on January 7, 2022. She suffered from Type 1 diabetes, a condition that medical care can manage, but her own family and their religious group, known as "the Church" or "the Saints," denied her treatment.
Justice Martin Burns of the Queensland Supreme Court ruled that Elizabeth's immediate family members and other sect followers committed manslaughter. The court convicted her parents, Jason Richard Struhs, 53, and Kerrie Elizabeth Struhs, 49, along with her 22-year-old brother, Zachary Alan Struhs, and several others from the sect.
The Struggle Between Faith-Based Beliefs and Medical Care
The "Church" had distanced itself from conventional religious groups, emphasizing a belief solely in divine healing through prayer and no medical intervention. Justice Burns noted that they adhered closely to a literal interpretation of the Bible, which, in their view, mandated an exclusivity of faith-healing practices over medical science.
Members firmly believed in the reception of the Holy Spirit through baptism and speaking in tongues, seen as a divine language by the group. Jason Struhs once sought medical help for Elizabeth when her condition first became life-threatening in July 2019, showing a momentary lapse in the otherwise stringent religious customs of the family.
However, Jason Struhs, heavily influenced by his wife and their religious community, later fully embraced the Church's doctrine. Even after authorities imprisoned his wife for her religious extremism, he continued neglecting Elizabeth's health needs.
A Family's Internal Conflict and Legal Outcomes
Justice Burns stated, "Elizabeth Rose Struhs was a vibrant, happy child, loved and adored by her family and the Church members, yet disastrously deprived of essential medical treatment due to their sole reliance on prayer for healing." This misplaced faith, according to the judge, left no room for the necessary medical intervention that would have saved her life.
The Struhs' eldest daughter, Jayde, estranged from the family, played a pivotal role in the court's understanding of the internal dynamics within the household. After leaving home at 16, she witnessed against her family, stressing that the community's radical beliefs fundamentally compromised child safety and well-being.
Despite the communal care Elizabeth received in every aspect other than her medical needs, her condition necessitated expertise and intervention that was deliberately withheld. This negligence sparked a legal reevaluation of child protection under such extreme religious practices.
Legal Reckoning and Future Implications
The court has scheduled sentencing for the convicted on February 11, where they face potential life imprisonment for their roles in Elizabeth's death. The case has highlighted critical gaps in child welfare and protection, particularly where religious beliefs intersect with the rights of a child to receive necessary health care.
"Although we had a good outcome today,” Jayde Struhs commented to the media, “I have to acknowledge the system failed to protect Elizabeth in the first place. More should have been done sooner." These sentiments resonate amidst ongoing debates about the extent to which religious freedom should be allowed to override basic healthcare rights.
The community and broader public now await the sentencing, hoping for justice to serve as a deterrence against such neglect. The tragic loss of Elizabeth Rose Struhs will continue to stir discussions on the balance between religious rights and child protection laws, hoping to prevent similar cases in the future.