Driving along a pockmarked road amid rocks and Joshua trees in a
lonely southern California desert, religious controversy might be the
last thing you'd expect to encounter.
A judge ruled the Mojave Cross must be covered until a First Amendment issue can be resolved.
And if you don't look too closely, you're likely to zip right past the focus of a hotly contested Supreme Court battle.
A federal judge has ordered the Mojave Cross, a war memorial erected by
a veterans group 75 years ago, to be covered. It's boxed in plywood.
The issue is less about what the cross symbolizes and more about where
it sits: In the middle of the Mojave National Preserve, which is
government land.
The high court on Wednesday will consider whether the display violates the First Amendment's provision for a separation of church and state.
More specifically, does an individual who protests the cross have legal
standing to take the case to court? Do congressional efforts to
minimize the appearance of a constitutional violation carry any weight?
"Religion
is always very hard fought in the Supreme Court, and this is no
exception," said Thomas Goldstein, a Washington appellate attorney and
co-founder of scotusblog.com.
"A single cross on a single plot
of land has given rise to this huge constitutional controversy. The
court will look at whether Congress, with a kind of wink and a nod,
(can) say that this governmental cross is now on private land or are we
(going to) say, no this is a governmental war monument and it has a
religious symbol on it."
Riley Bembry, who served as a medic in
World War I, helped erect the cross in 1934. It sits on a 4,000-foot
plateau and was a place of reflection for many vets who retreated to
the desert in part to recover from severe lung diseases caused by
mustard gas attacks during the Great War. An annual Easter service is
held there, but until recently only locals knew about it. The site is
not on any maps.
Bembry never got permission from the government to erect the cross, but
for decades nobody seemed to care. He was the caretaker of the memorial
for five decades until he died in 1984.
In 1994, 1.6 million
acres of desert -- including the land with the cross on it -- was
transferred to the National Park Service. A few years later, a resident
wanted to put up a Buddhist shrine near the cross. The request was
denied.
Frank Buono, a former deputy superintendent of the
preserve, filed a lawsuit with the help of the ACLU, claiming federal
officials were acting unfairly.
"He thinks that the government
is in effect misappropriating this sacred symbol and trying to give it
just a secular meaning," said Peter Eliasberg, managing attorney of the
ACLU of Southern California.
"It strikes me as sort of odd that it just happens to be in that
shape," Eliasberg said. "If what they really wanted to do was have a
war memorial, there are hundreds of other shapes that it could be in.
... Mr. Buono does not have an objection to the government having a war
memorial there that's in the shape of a soldier, or that's in the shape
of the Vietnam memorial."
A federal court ordered the cross
removed earlier this decade. A judge ruled that until the dispute is
settled the cross had to be covered.
In 2001 Congress got
involved. Lawmakers prohibited the Park Service from spending federal
dollars to remove the display. A year later, they designated the site a
national memorial similar to the Washington Monument and Mount Rushmore.
More importantly, the Republican-led Congress agreed to transfer one
acre of land around the cross in exchange for five private acres inside
the preserve. A San Francisco, California-based appeals court turned
that offer down, saying it failed to satisfy Constitutional concerns.
The land swap "would leave a little donut hole of land with a cross in the midst of a vast federal preserve" the court said.
The Supreme Court has traditionally taken a case-by-case approach to
similar First Amendment cases. Among other things, it has upheld tax
exemptions for churches and the mention of "God" on U.S. currency.
At the same time, it has banned government-sponsored school prayer and imposed limits on public aid to parochial schools.
In 2005, a Ten Commandments monument on the Texas Statehouse grounds
was allowed to stand because it was surrounded by historical markers.
But the same day, the placement of Ten Commandment parchments in two
Kentucky county courthouses was ruled unconstitutional. The high court
called them "a governmental effort substantially to promote religion."
Earlier this year, the justices ruled that a small religious group
could not erect a granite monument in a Utah park next to an existing
Ten Commandments display.
This time, the Obama administration will argue in favor of keeping the cross and allowing the land transfer.
The implications of the case could extend beyond the Mojave Cross.
Individual gravestones are not at issue, but war memorials have long
featured religious imagery.
"There are 5 million veterans that
we represent ... would be quite shocked and horrified to know that
those memorials and the symbols chosen by vets 75 years or 100 years
ago would suddenly have to be torn down by a bulldozer," said Hiram
Sasser, attorney for the Liberty Legal Institute.
Wanda and
Henry Sandoz have been taking care of the memorial since Bembry passed
away. They shake their heads over the legal fight that will take them
to Washington.
"I hope it won't be too long before we can look at the cross again without that stupid box," Wanda Sandoz said.
"Yep, really. We'll repaint it," Henry Sandoz said.
"I already bought some white paint," Wanda Sandoz said.