Verband Christlicher Pfadfinderinnen und Pfadfinder


The Verband Christlicher Pfadfinderinnen und Pfadfinder is a German Protestant coed Scouting and Guiding association. According to the VCP, the organization has about 47,000 members.
It is a member of the Ring deutscher Pfadfinderverbände, which in turn is a member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, and a member of the Ring Deutscher Pfadfinderinnenverbände, which in turn is a member of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts.

History

The association was formed in 1973 through the merger of three Protestant associations:
In 1976, some traditional Scouting groups left and formed a separate association, using the former name Christliche Pfadfinderschaft Deutschlands again.
Two years later, the VCP held his first national jamboree. Since then, roughly every four years a national jamboree has taken place:
In 1990, after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the first groups of Protestant Scouts and Guides were formed in the still existent German Democratic Republic. Today, the VCP is present in all Federal States of Germany.

Program

The association is divided in three age-groups:
The age-groups can be identified by their scarfs. Cubs wear scarfs with orange stripes, Jungpfadfinder with light green stripes, Pfadfinder scarfs with dark green stripes and Ranger/Rover scarfes with bordeaux-red stripes.
There is also a special branch for adults in Scouting, the Erwachsenenarbeit, which aims at all members older than 21 years including leaders and non-leaders. They wear scarfs with purple stripes.
Like most German Scout associations, the VCP emphasizes on youth leadership. Most patrol leaders start at 16 and most leaders up to district level are younger than 25.

Promise

The VCP has no common Scout Promise. Its constitution proposes the following text, but other wordings are possible:

Rules

The association has no common Scout Law. It uses Scout rules, which should be formulated individually by each group. The constitution proposes a number of points, which should go into these rules. Despite this, many subdivisions of the association use a common Scout Law.

Scout centres

The VCP runs two national Scout centres:
as well as a number of regional Scout centres mostly maintained by subnational divisions of the association.
Rieneck Castle was leased by the Christliche Pfadfinderschaft Deutschlands in 1959 and bought in 1967. It is mainly used for training courses on national level, and the annual International Creative Workshop. The VCP-Bundeszeltplatz was bought in 1997 and hosts camps from group to national level.

International Creative Workshop

The International Creative Workshop is an annual Scouting and Guiding event run by the VCP. It usually takes place at Rieneck Castle. As a Wood Badge training event, the aim of IMWe is to give leaders of Guide and Scout groups the opportunity to explore their creative talents in a relaxed setting. IMWe is prepared on behalf of the VCP by an international group of scouts who meet several times a year to organize the workshop, which is held around Easter. The workshop lasts for 8 or 9 days, with a symbolic framework or theme. Participants have to be aged 17 years or older. IMWe has been represented at international Scouting events such as EuroJam 2005 and World Scout Moot in 2015.