2016-07-27
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - One lawmaker said he has a compromise for the debate over ``Choose Life'' license plates for South Carolina - ``Choose Death'' tags. The law allowing the ``Choose Life'' plate was created in 2001, but Planned Parenthood and others sued, claiming the state discriminated by providing a forum for only one political viewpoint. The state has appealed last month's ruling by U.S. District Judge William Bertelsman, who said the slogan ``Choose Life'' on tags violated the First Amendment. ``My bill is simply a reaction to the abortionists,'' said State Rep. John Graham Altman. ``They're pro-choice. Well, they've got a choice - whether to buy (the tag) or not.'' Peter Murphy, the Columbia attorney who represented Planned Parenthood, says Altman's bill misses the point. The case was about the First Amendment, he said, not abortion. ``It is unfortunate that Mr. Altman apparently doesn't understand the First Amendment or the judge's decision,'' Murphy said. But House Ways and Means Chairman Bobby Harrell, also a Republican, said every specialty tag the state produces espouses a viewpoint. ``I think John is simply trying to make a point that all of these tags come from one point of view, and it's hypocritical to single out that one,'' said Harrell, who sponsored legislation creating a license plate for public education. Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Stone tablet allegedly found in Al-Aqsa mosque might spark religious war, says Jordanian official
Associated Press - January 24, 2003 AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - A widespread religious war could erupt if Israeli claims persist over a disputed holy site in Jerusalem's Old City that both Muslims and Jews lay claim to, a Jordanian official for Jerusalem affairs said Friday. The comments by Abdullah Kan'an, secretary-general of Jordan's Royal Committee for Jerusalem Affairs, follow recent Israeli reports of a stone tablet allegedly being found during renovations carried out by Muslim administrators of the mosque compound known to Muslims as the Haram as-Sharif, or Noble Sanctuary, and to Jews as the Temple Mount. Israeli geologists have said that the stone bears Hebrew inscriptions detailing repair plans for the Jewish Temple of King Solomon that strongly resemble descriptions in the Bible's Book of Kings. If proven, such evidence could strengthen Jewish claims to the long disputed holy site, which was the scene of violence in September 2000 that sparked the recent round of Israeli-Palestinian fighting. Muslim clerics insist that no Jewish shrine ever stood at the site. That claim was made by Palestinian officials in failed negotiations with Israel in 2000 over who would be sovereign there. Jewish tradition holds two biblical Temples were destroyed at the site by invading armies in 586 B.C. and 70 A.D. Kan'an, from Jordan's Jerusalem affairs committee, said in a statement released Friday that ``Jewish gangs and extremist factions'' in Israel were using the claims of the discovered tablet to support their bid to destroy the Al-Aqsa Mosque - Islam's third holiest shrine that is located at the site - and rebuild ``what they call the third 'temple.'''
``If that happened, God forbid, a holy religious war will definitely inflame the whole region,'' Kan'an said. The sandstone tablet has a 15-line inscription resembling descriptions in Kings II, 12:1-6, 11-17, said Israel's Geological Survey, which examined the artifact. The words refer to King Joash, who ruled the area 2,800 years ago. In it, the king tells priests to take ``holy money ... to buy quarry stones and timber and copper and labor to carry out the duty with faith.'' If the work on a new Jewish temple is completed well, ``the Lord will protect his people with blessing,'' reads the last sentence of the inscription. A Jerusalem collector who has declined to come forward and his lawyer David Zailer would not say where the tablet was found or provide further details. Biblical archaeologist Gabriel Barkai said the collector asked the Israel Museum to determine the inscription's authenticity and was told the museum's experts could not rule out a forgery. The Israel Museum declined comment then. Adnan Husseini, the director of the Islamic Trust that administers the Jerusalem mosque compound, has denied that the tablet was found during renovation work there. When Israel conquered east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war, it permitted Muslim clergy to continue administering the hilltop area to avoid conflict with the Muslim world.
more from beliefnet and our partners
Close Ad