Group to sue over Jesus statue decision
A
Wisconsin-based atheist group has said it will sue the U.S. Forest
Service over the presence of a statue of Jesus Christ on Big
Mountain.
The Freedom From Religion Foundation
announced its lawsuit last week after the Forest Service said it
would reauthorize a special use permit for the Knights of Columbus
to keep the statue in place.
The permit is for 10 years and is for
the display of the statue on a 25-foot by 25-foot parcel of land
near the top of Chair 2 at Whitefish Mountain Resort.
In a press release, Freedom From
Religion said it had a legal complaint ready and expected to file
it in federal court in Montana.
“The U.S. Forest Service has unlawfully
misused federal land owned by all of us to further Christianity in
general, and Roman Catholicism in particular,” the group’s
co-president Annie Laurie Gaylor said. “This diminishes the civil
and political standing of non-religious and non-Christian
Americans, and shows flagrant governmental preference for religion
and Christianity.”
Flathead Forest Supervisor Chip Weber
re-authorize the permit.
“I understand the statue has been a
long-standing object in the community since 1955, and I recognize
that the statue is important to the community for its historical
heritage based on its association with the early development of the
ski area on Big Mountain,” Weber said.
The statue’s historic value and
eligibility for listing on the National Register of Historic Places
is in part directly linked to the current physical location of the
statue.
A decision last year by the U.S. Forest
Service by the statue in jeopardy for remaining on Big Mountain.
Renewal of the permit was originally denied.
The forest service delayed its final
decision last fall to seek public comment on the issue and received
about 95,000 comments on the issue. The comments did not identify
substantive concerns related to environmental conditions, according
to the forest service.
After the public comment, the forest
service issued a new permit to the Knights of Columbus.
The statue has been in its current
location since 1953 and is considered to be a memorial to local
World War II veterans. The Knights of Columbus and veterans of the
10th Mountain Division erected the statue.