WASHINGTON, D.C. –
Fourteen states, five major Jewish groups, municipal workers, and a community
service organization led a groundswell of support for a historic cross under
attack in Pensacola, Florida. The broad coalition of religious and secular
groups are urging the federal appeals court in Kondrat’yev, et al v. City of Pensacola to protect
the 76-year-old landmark from being torn down.
The cross was placed in Pensacola's 35-acre Bayview Park in
1941 by a local community service group as the U.S. prepared to enter World War
II. For decades, community events have been held at the cross, including
Veterans Day and Memorial Day services. The cross is now one of more than 170
displays in Pensacola’s many parks and serves as a symbol of the city’s history
and culture. But in June a federal judge ordered that the cross must be torn
down. The city has now appealed.
Lawsuits like this one, based on offense at religious
symbols “encourage the erasure of minority religions from public life,” said
the friend-of-the-court brief of five Jewish groups.
“The district court’s reasoning would threaten countless
monuments,” like “veterans’ memorials that contain religious imagery including
crosses, citations to scripture, and the like,” said the friend-of-the-court brief of fourteen states.
The cross stood for almost 75 years without complaint. But
in 2016, the American Humanist Association sued the city of Pensacola on behalf
of four people who said the cross was “offensive.”
“The public square can and should reflect the important
role that religion plays in our history and culture,” said Luke Goodrich,
deputy general counsel at Becket, which is defending the City of Pensacola. “We
don’t have to censor our history and culture just because part of it is
religious.”
The fourteen states and five Jewish organizations were
joined by JCI Florida, a community service group and successor to the
organization that originally donated the cross, and the International Municipal
Lawyers Association, which speaks out on issues of interest to cities around
the country. Becket is representing the City of Pensacola and Mayor Ashton
Hayward.
Additional Information:
- Kondrat’yev, et al v. City of Pensacola (legal docs, press releases, images, news)
- States’ Amicus Brief (October 3, 2017)
- Jewish groups’ Amicus Brief (October 3, 2017)
- JCI Florida’s Amicus Brief (October 3, 2017)
- International Municipal Lawyers Association Amicus Brief (October 3, 2017)
- Foundation for Moral Law Amicus Brief (October 3, 2017)
- Becket’s Opening Brief (September 26, 2017)
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Becket is a non-profit, public-interest law firm
dedicated to protecting the free expression of all religious traditions. For
over 20 years, it has defended clients of all faiths, including Buddhists,
Christians, Jews, Hindus, Muslims, Native Americans, Sikhs, and Zoroastrians
(read more).
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