The Star Malaysia

French Catholics lash out at cross removal

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RENNES (France): French Catholic authoritie­s expressed anger at the court-ordered removal of a cross from a statue of the late pope Jean-Paul II, which prompted outrage from his native Poland.

France’s highest administra­tive court ruled last week that the cross, in the northweste­rn town of Ploermel, must be taken down due to strict secularism laws separating church and state.

The Catholic diocese in Vannes deplored the move, saying it “risks exacerbati­ng the tendency to make Christian symbols ever less visible”.

The court move raised the hackles of French rightwinge­rs and the farright, while the conservati­ve government in Warsaw suggested moving the statue to Poland.

“The Polish government will try to save this monument to our compatriot from censorship and we will propose moving it to Poland,” Prime Minister Beata Szydlo said.

The statue, by Russian artist Zurab Tsereteli, was erected in a square in Ploermel under an arch topped by a cross following a 2006 decision by local authoritie­s.

The National Federation for Free Thought, a non-profit organisati­on, took the issue to court alongside two local residents.

The court ruled that the cross breached France’s 1905 secularism law, which forbids religious symbols from being displayed on public monuments.

 ??  ?? A cross to bear: This photo taken in 2016 shows a bronze statue of Pope John Paul II by controvers­ial Georgia-born Russian artist Zurab Tsereteli in Ploermel, Brittany, western France.
A cross to bear: This photo taken in 2016 shows a bronze statue of Pope John Paul II by controvers­ial Georgia-born Russian artist Zurab Tsereteli in Ploermel, Brittany, western France.

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