Italy Crusades for the Cross | Print |  E-mail
Written by Rebecca Terrell   
Thursday, 19 November 2009 00:00

crucifixThe mayors of several Italian cities are rebelling against a European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruling that bans the crucifix from public classrooms. The ECHR found that the display of crucifixes in state schools is a "violation of the right to education taken jointly with the freedom of thought, conscience and religion."

In response to the ruling, Mayor Vittorio Gatti of Besana in the Brianza Province has ordered the schools in his city to display crucifixes in all classrooms within the next week or face a fine of 150 euros. The ordinance posted on the city's Web page cites a number of national and local rulings that run contrary to the ECHR judgment and points out the Italian government has filed an appeal with the ECHR. It defends public display of the crucifix as a "symbol to express the high ground of civic values, which are also the values that delineate the secularity of the law of the State," quoting an earlier state court ruling.

Primary school officials in Priverno, Italy, face an even larger fine of 500 euros if they do not comply with a similar order issued by that city's mayor. According to the Italian news outlet Leggo, Umberto Macci, mayor of that town in the Latina province, used local regulations established in 1924 and 1927 to uphold his order that all primary school classrooms have crucifixes displayed. Macci stated the religious icon is "an expression of fundamental Italian civic and cultural values."

Mayor Guido Castelli of Ascoli in the Piceno Province is also defending the crucifix in schools, according to the Leggo report. He ordered schools in his city to ignore the ECHR sentence until the Italian government's appeal is heard. Castelli referred to the ECHR ruling as foolish and said the crucifix represents "religious values of the Republican Constitution: freedom, mutual respect, enhancement of the individual, solidarity and the rejection of any discrimination.”

The mayor of Galzigano Terma in the Province of Padova, Riccardo Roman, has taken the matter even further by ordering the crucifix displayed in all public buildings, with a fine of 500 euros for non-compliance. His ordinance reads, "the crucifix in schools does not affect the dignity of anyone but represents the history, culture and values of our nation."

Other European leaders are equally incensed by the ECHR ruling. Fox News reports that Poland's president, Lech Kaczynski, as well as former president Lech Walesa, have both joined the Vatican in publicly denouncing the ban. The Greek Orthodox Church also opposes the ban, fearing it could set a precedent for public display of all religious symbols. The BBC reports that Archbishop Ieronymos, head of the Greek Orthodox Church, has called an emergency Holy Synod to determine the proper course of action to take. Yet there are supporters of the ban in Europe. The BBC also reported that Helsinki Monitor, a human rights group, is using the ECHR ruling to urge removal of all religious symbols in schools.

Judgments of the ECHR are binding on all members of the European Convention on Human Rights, including Italy, Greece and Poland. The ECHR was established in 1959 under the auspices of the Council of Europe, an international organization established after World War II in an effort to integrate European governments. This latest ruling came about in response to a complaint filed by Soile Lautsi, a mother who was offended by the presence of crucifixes in her two children's state school classrooms.

Missing in the debate is mention of the rights of God over those of His creatures. But the United States should at least heed the lesson it conveys as our officials head toward integration with Canada and Mexico into a North American Union and strengthening of the United Nations.


Translation from Italian sources provided by Google Translate.

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Flu-Bird said:

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Good for italy
Looks like ITALY is standing up for the cross despite what a leftists court of the EUROPEAN(SOVIET)UNION ruled We could certialy need that here to fight against the socialists ACLU and their sinister plans to ban the cross
 
November 19, 2009
Votes: +3

Captain Gabe said:

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...
This is how it's supposed to be in the United States as well. Member states in the union are supposed to say "Nope, we're just not going to comply. What are you going to do about it?" Without a standing army or a supranational police force, there was nothing they could do. For us, gone are the days when the states protected their citizens by flat refusal to obey. The EU members, however, are still able to do that because they retain their armies and there is no supranational one.
 
November 19, 2009
Votes: +1

His friend said:

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Cheers for...

In response to the ruling, Mayor Vittorio Gatti of Besana in the Brianza Province has ordered the schools in his city to display crucifixes in all classrooms...

"Well done, my good and faithful servants." smilies/smiley.gif
 
November 19, 2009
Votes: +3

Thomas Paine said:

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Go Italy!
Good job Italy. Don't let the NWO destroy your character. Taking a crucifix out of an Italian school is like taking Swiss cheese out of Switzerland.

Keep the faith alive!
 
November 19, 2009
Votes: +1

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