The Virgin Mary Wins a Medal in Spain—and Triggers a Lawsuit
Tradition of State Honoring Religious Icons Rankles Some
Updated Oct. 7, 2014 10:28 a.m. ET
WSJ
The statue of the Virgin Mary in Malaga, Spain, was
given the country's highest police honor: the Gold Medal of Police
Merit. But not everyone is celebrating.
MÁLAGA, Spain—The latest winner of
Spain’s Gold Medal of Police Merit never walked a beat or made an
arrest. True, she never flinched in the face of danger. But that is
because she can’t move.
Reaching far
outside its uniformed ranks, the Interior Ministry awarded this year’s
medal to a life-size statue, Our Most Holy Mary of Love, “for sharing
police values such as dedication, caring, solidarity and sacrifice.”
The
choice drew attention to a Spanish tradition—awarding state honors to
Roman Catholic icons—and triggered a lawsuit that aims to undo it.
Spain’s National Court is expected to rule in the coming weeks.
Jorge García González,
head of the Movement Towards a Secular State, is suing the
Spanish government to limit what he calls an ingrained Catholic
influence in public affairs. He isn’t entirely unhappy with the award,
calling it “a blessing in disguise” that has inspired jokes and
energized his followers. An online petition has gathered more than 1,500
signatures supporting the nomination of Spider-Man for next year’s
medal.
Virgen del Amor
The award-winning icon, called Virgin del Amor
in Spanish, depicts the mother of Jesus Christ and resides in a church
in Málaga, in southern Spain. She meets none of the qualifications for a
recipient of the police medal, Mr. García said: She isn’t a member of
the police force, nor has she suffered injury or death in the line of
duty. “Even if you believe in the Virgin, a statue is not a person,” he
said.
Officials say such awards simply
recognize long-standing ties between Spain’s police forces and Catholic
lay communities. In this case, the medal indirectly honors the work of
the Brotherhood of Jesus El Rico, a group which hoists the icon of Mary
along with one depicting Jesus for a solemn procession through the
streets of Málaga every Holy Week.
“This
has been happening for decades,” said José Manuel Pérez, deputy
director general of the national police technical cabinet, who oversees
the nominations and displays a poster of Mary in his uniform locker.
“For many people in southern Spain, the Virgin and the religious groups
dedicated to these icons do important work in the community.”
Some
rank-and-file police officers object. José María Benito, an official of
the police officers’ union, told the online Spanish daily El Boletín:
“Give the Virgin whatever you like, take her some flowers, make her the
patron saint of our people, but don’t give her a police medal, least of
all one reserved for police officers who have lost their lives in an
attack.”
Yet the award has precedents in
municipalities across Spain. The Virgin de la Almudena, Madrid’s
patroness, has held the city’s Gold Medal, a civil award granted in
recognition to institutions or people who have distinguished themselves
within the region, since 1945 and was awarded its Medal of Honor in
1961.
The practice has gained momentum
since the conservative Popular Party swept municipal and national
elections in 2011, said Mr. García, who since then has documented more
than 30 decisions by municipal councils to appoint local icons
representing Mary, Jesus and various Catholic saints as “perpetual
mayors.” One council, in the city of Almería, passed the incumbent
mayor’s official baton to an icon of Mary, laying it at her feet.
When
the municipal council in Prado del Rey asked voters to ratify the
Virgin of Carmen as their “perpetual mayor,” the icon won easily,
although just 13% of voters went to the polls.
Two
years ago Interior Minister
Jorge Fernández Díaz
granted a police medal to the Our Lady of the Pillar in Zaragoza,
patron saint of Spain’s military police. This year he bestowed praise
on another saint, announcing at Spain’s annual International Tourism
Fair that St. Teresa was “making important intercessions” for the
national economy “during these tough times.”
Jorge García González, right, president of the Movement Towards a Secular State, at a march in Spain.
Movement Towards a Secular State
Mr. García, the 49-year-old owner of a small clothing store in Zaragoza, is uneasy about all this.
Smartly
dressed with dark, slicked-back hair, he attends Mass every Sunday and
says personal beliefs “belong in the private sphere.” He said he formed
his views as a history and philosophy student in his 20s and hid them
for years from his devoutly Catholic mother. In 2008 he and like-minded
secularists formed their movement, which now claims 100 dues-paying
members and several court victories.
Mr.
García said he avoided making a legal church-state issue out of Our
Most Holy Mary of Love because Spain’s 1978 constitution is ambiguous on
the subject of religion. It states, “There shall be no State religion,”
but adds that “the religious beliefs of Spanish society shall be taken
into account.” According to a 2014 study by the Spanish Center for
Sociological Research, 69% of Spaniards identify themselves as Roman
Catholics.
In challenging the police
award, he built his case on Spain’s 1964 Law of Honors and Awards, which
specifies that the police medal must “reward extraordinary services
performed by administrative police officers.”
Spain’s
Interior Ministry, asked to comment on the case, didn’t address that
argument. It said in an email that the award of such decorations to
recipients outside the police ranks “does not constitute an
extraordinary fact in the history of the state security and police
forces.”
In court documents, government
lawyers argued that Mr. García’s organization, by law, had no business
suing because its interests hadn’t been harmed by the award.
Many
residents of Málaga don’t get what all the fuss is about. Most shops
and public offices here in southern Spain’s Andalusia region shut down
during Holy Week as crowds join in Catholic processions depicting the
crucifixion and resurrection of Christ.
There
was no popular outcry in Málaga when Spain’s national police chief
pinned the medal to the statue’s jewel-bedecked, red-and-gold robes in
April. “It’s totally inoffensive,” said tavern owner Alvaro Fernandez
Chamez. “People here are handing out medals all the time.”
Mr.
García’s challenge to the award rests with the high court, which has
decided that a panel of magistrates will examine the case without having
the opposing parties call witnesses.
“I
think this is a smart move,” Mr. García said, suggesting that his
lawyer would have asked that the award recipient take the stand. “After
all, what would the Virgin say? A statue can’t speak.”
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