Wednesday, September 12, 2012

GODLESS WEDNESDAY: Atheists Sue 9/11 Memorial


This above image of two girders found in the wreckage of the collapse of the World Trade Center's twin towers a few days after 9/11 has become the subject of a lawsuit between those who believe it should be included in the National September 11 Memorial & Museum as an "artifact" and those who believe that a government-sponsored entity should not be supporting the reification of a religious symbol.

CNN reports:

In documents submitted to the court, the museum defends the inclusion of the cross, saying that “the 9/11 Museum is an independent nonprofit corporation. Its curators’ decisions to display particular objects, such as the Artifact, in the Museum are not state actions to which Constitutional protections apply.”
In the same documents, the museum argues that even if constitutional protections apply, “there is no legal authority for the proposition that a museum is prohibited from displaying an item with historical, cultural or artistic significance merely because that item also has religious significance.”
Silverman [of American Atheists] rejects that argument. “The argument that this is not a religious symbol is asinine and arrogant,” he says. “They want 9/11 to appear to be an attack on Christianity, and it was not.”
Shortly after plans for a 9/11 museum started to be worked out, Silecchia, the construction worker [who first found the object in the ruins], and the Rev. Brian Jordan, a priest who ministered to firefighters and emergency responders at ground zero, began to press to the inclusion of the World Trade Center cross in the memorial and museum.
“First of all, it is an artifact of ground zero,” Jordan told the Irish Echo, a small publication in New York, in 2002. “And secondly, it is sacred ground, for God’s sake.”
Jordan declined interview requests, saying in an e-mail that “after a careful period of reflection, I have decided not to make any public comment at this time.”
In the same interview, Jordan argued that the reason it should be included is because most of the victims were Christians - “the plurality of which were Catholic,” Jordan said. The cross was first displayed near the edge of ground zero, until on October 5, 2006, the cross was moved to St. John’s Church, where it sat on the corner of Barclay and Vesey streets.

What do you think, Gentle Readers? Is it a cross or a "girder set"? And should it be included in a museum created with our taxpayer dollars ?

1 comment:

Steve T. said...

I used to work at the Louisiana State Museum, which is state owned and run. The Catholic Church played a large role in the early history of the state, which is why we have parishes instead of counties. So of course we exhibited objects with religious associations, especially portraits.

If the curators at the 9/11 museum can justify their claims for the cross's historical and cultural significance, which shouldn't be hard, this atheist sees no reason not to collect and exhibit it.

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