KINGNEWSWIRE / PRESS RELEASE / Destination: Scientology revisits the Brussels European headquarters site, linking cultural heritage, community access and a landmark 2016 court ruling on freedom of religion
BRUSSELS, Belgium — 5 February 2026 — The Churches of Scientology for Europe in Brussels is marking 16 years since the dedication of its Boulevard de Waterloo headquarters, while noting that Scientology’s presence in Belgium now spans more than five decades. The anniversary follows renewed attention generated by the Destination: Scientology episode on Brussels and a related feature published by Freedom Magazine, which frames the building as a local landmark and revisits the long legal proceedings that ended with the dismissal of all charges against the Belgian Church and affiliated defendants.
The Brussels site—dedicated on 23 January 2010—occupies an early 20th-century building on Boulevard de Waterloo 100–103 and is described as an 88,000-square-foot facility serving both local parishioners and visitors from across Europe. The premises include a chapel for congregational gatherings and ceremonies, rooms for religious training and pastoral counselling, and a public information space presenting Scientology beliefs and practices and the life and works of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, alongside information on Church-supported social betterment programmes.
While the Brussels headquarters dates to 2010, Belgium’s national timeline extends further back. Public registry information lists the Église de Scientologie de Belgique (ASBL) as founded in 1974—placing Scientology’s organised presence in the country at more than 51 years. Church representatives say the Brussels building has become a focal point for activity in a city where diverse communities and European institutions share the same streets, and where questions of pluralism and freedom of religion or belief are regularly debated in civic and policy settings.
Scientology Network Brussels episode of Destination: Scientology presents the site through the lens of the capital’s multilingual culture and its reputation for compromise, spotlighting community events and interfaith engagement as part of the Church’s daily rhythm. The programme includes on-camera reflections on dialogue and social cohesion, with one staff member describing a goal to “unite people” through better communication and understanding—an emphasis echoed in the Freedom Magazine account of the episode’s theme of “unity while still being diverse.”
A personal narrative featured in the programme describes how applying Scientology communication principles affected a Belgian entrepreneur’s workplace and relationships—an example used in the episode to illustrate how Scientologists describe their religious practice in everyday life. Such testimonials appear alongside broader context: the programme and related coverage revisit a long period in which the Belgian Church faced scrutiny and criminal allegations—an episode that became, in the programme’s telling, a defining test of Belgium’s commitments to due process and equal treatment of minority faiths.
The legal proceedings culminated on 11 March 2016, when a Brussels court dismissed the case and rejected all charges against the Church’s Belgian branch, its European headquarters and individual defendants. Contemporary reporting by outlets noted that the court found serious issues affecting the fairness of the proceedings. For Scientology representatives, the decision is cited as reaffirming a basic democratic principle: that people should not be prosecuted merely because of their religion.
Ivan Arjona, Scientology’s representative to the European Union, OSCE, Council of Europe and United Nations, said the Brussels anniversary is also a reminder of how European values are tested in practice—especially when minority communities face pressure.
“Brussels is where Europe’s institutions speak most often about rights, pluralism and non-discrimination,” Arjona said. “Those principles become meaningful when they are applied consistently to everyone—including minorities. A community building is not just bricks and mortar; it is a visible commitment to dialogue, civic responsibility and due process, the foundations of social cohesion in a diverse Europe.”
In Belgium, the Brussels Church and local Scientologists show their community engagement extending beyond religious services into social reform and social betterment work delivered through secular educational initiatives—notably drug-prevention outreach and human-rights education. These activities are part of a wider approach encouraged by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, emphasising practical tools, public information resources and cooperation with local partners, educators and civic groups.
On drug prevention, Belgian initiatives linked to the Foundation for a Drug-Free World and local partners have focused on distributing and explaining “Truth About Drugs” materials in public settings and community events. Recent examples described in programme coverage include outreach in Brussels at the Percusounds Festival in August 2023, where organisers said the priority was equipping young people, parents and teachers with factual information about substances and their risks. Other activities include nationwide visibility actions such as a “10 Days to Say No to Drugs” tour timed around the UN International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, and Belgium-wide bike tours associated with Julie Delvaux, presented in Voices for Humanity as a sustained effort to bring prevention materials to communities across the country.
On human-rights education, Brussels-based work connected to Youth for Human Rights programming has been framed around making the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) understandable and usable in everyday civic life—through workshops, public presentations and multimedia public-service announcements illustrating specific UDHR articles. Brussels has also served as a venue for youth-focused rights programming, including the International Human Rights Summit held in the city in 2012, and community forums such as the Brussels open-house events promoting tolerance and inclusion, where Youth for Human Rights representatives presented UDHR-focused materials. Arjona linked this approach to Europe’s emphasis on democratic resilience: “Rights are protected most effectively when they are understood in practical terms—by students, families and local communities—and when institutions and citizens share the responsibility of making human dignity a daily reality.”
The Church of Scientology, its churches, missions, groups and members are present across the European continent. Scientology Europe reports a continent-wide presence through more than 140 churches, and missions and communities in at least 27 European nations, alongside thousands of community-based social reform initiatives focused on education, prevention and neighbourhood-level support, inspired by the work of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard.
Within Europe’s diverse national frameworks for religion, the Church’s recognitions continue to expand, with administrative and judicial authorities in Spain, Portugal, Sweden, the Netherlands, Italy, Germany, Slovakia and others, as well as the European Court of Human Rights, having addressed and acknowledged Scientology communities as protected by the national and international provisions of Freedom of Religion or belief.






