Italian schools told to remove crucifixes
The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that Italian schools should remove crucifixes from classrooms, sparking uproar in Italy, where such icons are embedded in the national psyche.
"This is an abhorrent ruling," said Rocco Buttiglione, a former culture minister who helped write papal encyclicals.
"It must be rejected with firmness. Italy has its culture, its traditions and its history. Those who come among us must understand and accept this culture and this history," he said.
The court ruling, which Italy said it would appeal, said crucifixes on school walls, a common sight that is part of every Italian's life, could disturb children who were not Christians.
Italy has been in the throes of national debate on how to deal with a growing population of immigrants, mostly Muslims, and the court sentence is likely to become another battle cry for the centre-right government's policy to restrict newcomers.
The Vatican spokesman said he would not comment until he knew more about the ruling but Italy's powerful bishops' conference said the ruling "evokes sadness and bewilderment."
Members of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's government bristled, weighing in with words such as "shameful," "offensive," "absurd," "unacceptable," and "pagan."
MORTAL BLOW
Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said the court has dealt a "mortal blow to a Europe of values and rights," adding that it was a bad precedent for other countries.
Condemnation crossed party lines. Paola Binetti, a Catholic in the opposition Democratic Party, the successor of what was once the West's largest communist party, said: "In Italy, the crucifix is a specific sign of our tradition."
The case was brought by an Italian national, Soile Lautsi, who complained that her children had to attend a public school in northern Italy which had crucifixes in every room.
Education Minister Mariastella Gelmini said crucifixes on the walls of tens of thousands of classrooms "does not mean adherence to Catholicism" but are a symbol of Italy's heritage.
"The history of Italy is marked by symbols and if we erase symbols we erase part of ourselves," Gelmini said.
Lautsi, the woman who filed the suit, said crucifixes on walls ran counter to her right to give her children a secular education and the Strasbourg-based court ruled in her favour.
"The presence of the crucifix ... could be encouraging for religious pupils, but also disturbing for pupils who practised other religions or were atheists, particularly if they belonged to religious minorities," the court said in a written ruling.
"The State (must) refrain from imposing beliefs in premises where individuals were dependent on it," it added, saying the aim of public education was "to foster critical thinking."
"JESUS DOESN'T BOTHER ME"
At least one Muslim girl disagreed with the court.
"If the crucifix is there and I am a Muslim I will continue to respect my religion. Jesus in the classroom doesn't bother me," Zenat, a 14-year-old girl of Egyptian origin, told Reuters Television.
Mario Baccini, a senator in Berlusconi's People of Freedom party, said the court had "gone adrift in paganism."
Two Italian laws dating from the 1920s, when the Fascists were in power, state that schools must display crucifixes.
Alessandra Mussolini, granddaughter of Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, said such rulings were leading to "a Europe without an identity."
Only a handful of politicians defended the court, including some members of the Democratic Party, as well as members of the communist party and atheist groups.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Aussie police to quash 700 speeding fines
Iran's web blocked temporarily - experts
China issues rules to limit foreign TV shows
Risotto king 'exploited underage girls'
Grisly well find linked to 'Speed Freak Killers'
Japan's nuclear evacuees still not allowed home
Deaf mute claims to have been kept as sex slave
Obama is next, Queen's mooner says
Birth induced so dying dad could hold daughter
Murder trial over 2003 honeymoon diving death
17 to hospital after hotel chemical spill
Kiwi accused in $3m cocaine case
TPK travel money to be paid back
Speaker hits back in technology row
Boatie missing from idling yacht
Labour reveals PM's emails over radio show
Crusaders without Richie McCaw until April
High hopes for Valentine's surprise
Rimutaka Incline train dream on hold
Crusaders without Richie McCaw until April
Dad plays porn instead of Smurfs at kid's party
Guinness' all time greatest game ending
McClennan shooting for NRL title with Warriors
Houston under water when found
Speaker hits back in technology row
Son watches dad die in boat tragedy
Freak, tragic garage accident killed man
'Urewera four' armed revolutionary leaders - Crown
One dead after SH1 crash near Wellington
Daily trivia quiz: February 14
Houston under water when found
TPK travel money to be paid back
Speaker hits back in technology row
This Is Not a Love Song (list)
Virtual jobs to replace public servants
Laptop-shooting dad fights off fame
Rimutaka Incline train plan opposed by council
What should the MMP threshold be?
Why Valentine's isn't a Hallmark holiday
