Established 1840 25 July 2008
Normal font LARGE FONT
Subscriber Access
Log In
How to
FAQ
thetablet.co.uk
Search:
Further Reading
Archive
Special Reports
Additional Articles
Documents
The Tablet Lectures
The Tablet Surveys
The Pope and the Vatican
About The Tablet
Editor's Message
History of The Tablet
Where to buy The Tablet
Subscriber Services
Noticeboard
Contact Us
Links
Religious
Religious Education
Arts
Reference
Current Affairs
On The Net column
Tablet Shop
Subscribe to The Tablet
Back Issues
Binders and Indexes
Other Items
Tablet Bookshop
The Tablet Radio Show
Listen live to 'Taking The Tablet'
Advertise
To advertise in The Tablet
Weekly Newsletter
Name:
Email:  
Liturgical Calendar
2008 Calendar
   

Church in the World
1 March 2008
Italy

Judge sentenced for banning crucifix in court

Robert Mickens

A judge in central Italy has been given a one-year suspended jail sentence for repeatedly refusing to hear cases in courtrooms that display a crucifix, writes Robert Mickens.

A tribunal in the city of L'Aquila last week also ruled that 59-year-old Judge Luigi Tosti would be barred from holding public office for year.

It was the second time that the anti-crucifix judge has received a suspended sentence. In November 2005 a court sentenced him to seven months in jail.

Both penalties were for Judge Tosti's refusal to try cases on three different days in July 2005. The judge suspended the trials because the crucifix, a standard fixture in most Italian courts, was not removed from the room. Judge Tosti, who is Jewish, has argued against what he calls the Vatican's dominance of Italian public and secular life.

Pope Benedict XVI has insisted that crucifixes be displayed "on public buildings". In a homily on 15 August 2005 he said pointedly that "only if God is present do we have an orientation, a common direction; otherwise, disputes become impossible to settle".

Back to homepage

© The Tablet Publishing Company