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Naplitano joins group that would allow Ten Commandments monument

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  • Naplitano joins group that would allow Ten Commandments monument

    Douglas Daily Dispatch, AZ
    Feb 5 2005

    Naplitano joins group that would allow Ten Commandments monument to
    remain

    Howard Fischer/Capitol Media Services

    PHOENIX - Gov. Janet Napolitano joined Monday with a group that
    promotes what it calls "pro family'' legislation in Arizona in urging
    the U.S. Supreme Court to let a 6-foot-tall monument of the Ten
    Commandments remain in a public park across the street from the state
    Capitol.

    The brief, filed by the Center for Arizona Policy, said these kinds
    of monuments have "a valid secular purpose.'' Peter Gentala, the
    organization's legal counsel, got not only the governor to join in
    the plea but also Secretary of State Jan Brewer and 38 of the 90
    state lawmakers.

    Officially, the case before the nation's high court relates to a
    monument in Austin. A federal appeals court has rejected efforts to
    have it removed.

    But there is a virtually identical monument in Wesley Bolin Park,
    directly east of the House and Senate buildings. Any ruling on the
    legality of the Texas monument will determine the fate of its Phoenix
    counterpart.

    The decision by Napolitano came as no surprise to Eleanor Eisenberg,
    director of the Arizona Civil Liberties Union.

    She noted the governor opposed efforts by her organization two years
    ago to have the monument removed. But a lawsuit threatened at that
    time has been held in abeyance awaiting the outcome of the Texas
    case.

    The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments March 2.

    Tim Nelson, the governor's chief counsel, said Napolitano does not
    believe the monument amounts to a state endorsement of religion,
    something prohibited by the First Amendment.

    "It's one of many, many monuments out there'' in Wesley Bolin Park,
    Nelson said. Other monuments in the park include one to Armenians who
    the display said were martyred in Turkey early in the last century
    and another to Jewish war veterans.

    "One is not more prominent than the other,'' Nelson said. Gentala, in
    his legal papers, said there is no reason to move the Arizona
    monument.

    "Like Texas, the people of Arizona, by the decision of their elected
    officials, display a Ten Commandments monument on the grounds of
    their State Capitol,'' he wrote. "Arizona's Ten Commandments monument
    is one of the many ways the State acknowledges the role of religious
    faith in the lives of its citizens.''

    Gentala also noted that the state expressly acknowledges the
    existence of God: The state seal bears the motto Ditat Deus , which
    translates to "God enriches.''

    What the U.S. Supreme Court will do in this case is unclear.

    Four years ago, the justices refused to disturb a ruling by a
    different federal appellate court that concluded a similar monument
    had to go. It stood in front of the municipal building at Elkhart,
    Ind.

    At that time, Justice John Paul Stevens wrote that one thing that
    convinced him the monument was religious and not secular is that the
    First Commandment, "I AM the LORD thy God,'' was larger than the
    following nine.

    "The graphic emphasis placed on those first lines is rather hard to
    square with the proposition that the monument expresses no particular
    religious preference," Stevens wrote.

    The Arizona monument, dedicated in 1964, is etched in the sam way.
    And, like the Indiana monument, it also has two Stars of David and a
    symbol composed of the Greek letters "chi'' and "rho'' superimposed
    on each other that Stevens said represents Christ.

    But in 1995, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to disturb a Colorado
    Supreme Court decision that allowed the Ten Commandments to remain on
    the Colorado Capitol grounds.

    The Arizona monument orignally was located right next to the existing
    Capitol buildings. It was accepted at a ceremony by then-Gov. Paul
    Fannin, with Catholic, Protestant and Jewish representatives in
    attendance.

    The Phoenix Gazette reported at the time that the monument was one of
    many the Eagles had purchased, at $500 apiece, to give to state
    governments across the nation.

    It was moved across the street to the newly dedicated park more than
    a decade later.
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