For several weeks, Belle Plaine residents have returned daily to the city's Veterans Memorial Park in protest, demanding that officials restore a cross that had been removed from a military tribute in response to a complaint that it violated the separation of church and state.
City officials are exploring whether they can revive the cross by changing city code to designate a small area around the memorial as a "limited public forum."
The proposal came from townspeople who want the cross restored to a monument for fallen soldiers, together with the Alliance Defending Freedom, a large Christian legal nonprofit. The proposed public forum would accommodate up to five displays — religious or not — as long as they honor military veterans.
"This is all we were trying to accomplish," said Joe Burmeister, a groundskeeper with the Belle Plaine Veterans Club who reluctantly cut the cross off the donated monument at the city's request. "We wanted the memorial put back in its original state — nothing more," Burmeister said.
The saga began in August when Belle Plaine resident JoAnne Gill filed a police report questioning whether a cross — attached to the silhouette of a kneeling soldier at a comrade's headstone — erected at the public park was legal. The Freedom From Religion Foundation also objected, arguing that a cross in a public park violates the separation of church and state required by the Constitution.
Belle Plaine residents learned of the city's decision to remove the cross in early January. It outraged members of the Veterans Club and galvanized residents of the small town 45 miles southwest of Minneapolis. Hundreds of crosses were erected on front lawns and displayed in private businesses to pressure city leaders into reversing the decision.
A rotating guard of citizens occupied the park each day, toting American flags and their own handmade crosses. Many argued that the symbol, in the context of a fallen soldier tribute, was secular rather than religious.
A lawyer representing the pro-cross contingent suggested the creation of a free-speech zone around the memorial, which residents called a fair compromise.