(March 04, 2010) A five-judge panel at the Grand Chamber of the European Court of
Human Rights accepted Tuesday an appeal filed by the Italian government to a November
ruling that deemed crucifixes in public schools a violation of freedom. Arguing that
the crucifix is a symbol of Italian culture, the government on January 28 filed an
appeal of the European Court ruling. The Grand Chamber's acceptance of the appeal
is the first step in the process; in the coming months, the chamber will give its
ruling in a final judgement. “This is the first step of the victory, indeed it is
already a victory in this case," said Grégor Puppinck, director of the European Centre
for Law and Justice. "The Court has recognized that the November decision raised serious
legal issues and must be reconsidered due to its lack of case law reference and due
consideration of the margin of appreciation. We can consider that the Grand Chamber
decision will be the real first true decision of this case.” The court's November
ruling was criticized as being based on a negative understanding of religious freedom,
and as overstepping the cultural and religious traditions of individual nations.
“It is very important in this context that the European court respects the spiritual
and moral values on which it is based," Puppinck affirmed. “If the court ruled against
its own spiritual and moral foundation it would ruin this European system which was
founded to protect human rights.”