
Quote by:
hensatri
On one hand...yes...that effort could be vented elsewhere. On the other hand, it's not like our outrage is a finite resource, there is enough activism and energy to go around even to a cause like this, and on the third hand (yes a three handed reply), some fights are too big to win in the current social climate (getting God off the dollar bill), some are so little that they seem petty (the teacher at public school wear a cross necklace), I think this one is like baby-bear's bed, it's just right.
I do agree that the cross has become part of graveyard imagery, and in that context can be easily seen as transcending religious specificity. If a friend of mine were to die and I were to be in a situation where I would give them and impromptu burial, I can certainly see myself erecting a small cross of branches tied together to mark the grave. I can’t imagine doing otherwise. Whether you are Christian or not, the imagery is part of western culture. So I do not (based on what I know) bear any ill will to those who first erected the memorial. However, where I have a problem is that they clung so firmly to the Christian imagery once it was objected to. I can easily see putting a cross on the memorial without thinking anything controversial about it, but then when someone points out that the memorial is religion specific, and offers to take down the crosses and replace them with secular memorials just as nice if not better, and you suddenly cling to the cross, you have now betrayed yourself. What may have been innocent and unassuming at first is revealed to be religiously divisive. The memorial didn’t just happen to be crosses, no…it HAS to be crosses. If they’d said “Ok, put of some rifles with a helmets on them or something, we don’t care about the Christian part we just want a memorial to our lost friends”, then this would hardly even be news. The only reason that this is a big deal is because, to the people defending the site, if it’s not Christian is not acceptable.
You know what...I need to grow a fourth hand. On the fourth hand I also suspect, although I cannot possibly know, that if the exact same little shrine had been erected with Muslim religious imagery, it would have been taken down, no scratch that, it never would have gotten erected in the first place. I think this is a perfect example of Christianity being so utterly pervasive in the culture that it gets an assumed pass where no such thing should be assumed.
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