On the morning of September 11, 2001, a group of Islamic terrorists murdered almost 3,000 persons by hijacking four commercial airplanes and crashing them into New York’s World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. 1 Ten years to the day after these horrific events, the current and former Presidents of the United States, Barack Obama and George W. Bush, traveled to the World Trade Center site, commonly referred to as “Ground Zero,” to dedicate a National Memorial to these victims, as well as to six persons killed in the earlier 1993 terrorist bombing of the World Trade Center. More recently, on May 15, 2014, President Obama returned to Ground Zero to open a National Museum, situated underneath the Memorial and dedicated to documenting the history of the terrorist attacks and the heroic rescue efforts that followed.
This case, filed approximately three years before the Museum opened, challenges the display therein of a particular artifact recovered from World Trade Center debris, a column and cross-beam from one of the Twin Towers that gave some who saw it, particularly rescue workers, the impression of .a large Latin cross, a symbol frequently associated with Christianity. Appellants, American Atheists, Inc., and three members of that organization, Dennis Horwitz, Kenneth Bronstein, and Jane Everhart (collectively, “American Atheists”), initially contended that
any
display of the column and cross-beam, denominated by the Museum as “The Cross at Ground Zero,” would violate the Constitution’s Establishment and Equal Protection Clauses,
see
U.S. Const, amends. I & XIV, as well as parallel provisions of New York and New Jersey state law.
2
On this appeal from an award of summary judgment entered on March 28, 2013, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Deborah A. Batts,
Judge),
in favor of appellees, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (“Port Authority”) and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the World Trade Center Foundation, Inc.
For the reasons stated herein, we conclude that American Atheists’ challenge fails on the merits. Accordingly, we hereby affirm the judgment in favor of appel-lees. 3
I. Background
On
de novo
review of a summary judgment award, we are obliged to view any disputed issues of fact in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. This case presents no.disputes of material fact as is evident from American Atheists’ decision not to file any response to appel-lees’ Rule 56.1 statement in support of their summary judgment motion.
See Gu-bitosi v. Kapica,
A. The Cross at Ground Zero
In the days and weeks following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, hundreds of professional and volunteer rescue workers descended on lower Manhattan where they pored through
A few weeks later, on October 3, 2001, volunteers lifted the 17-foot column and cross-beam from the wreckage and erected it onto a platform at the West Street edge of the recovery site. The following day, almost one hundred people gathered when Father Brian Jordan, a Franciscan priest who had been blessing victim remains at Ground Zero, blessed the artifact. Soon after, Father Jordan, who also had been offering masses for workers at Ground Zero, began to conduct such services at the cross site. Persons of different faiths, or of none at all, were welcome and offered communion. See Draft Script for Exhibit, Exh. 4 to Patterson Deck, NSMM 2202. 5 The Cross at Ground Zero thus came to be viewed not simply as a Christian symbol, but also as a symbol of hope and healing for all persons. 6
In 2006, construction work on the new World Trade Center Transportation Hub prompted the Port Authority to arrange for the retrieved column and crossbeam’s removal from Ground Zero to an airport hangar designated as the interim repository for World Trade Center artifacts. The plan was met by an outpouring of public support for maintaining this particular artifact at or near Ground Zero. Accordingly, the Port Authority agreed that the column and cross-beam could be temporarily housed at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church, which faces directly toward Ground Zero. There the column and crossbeam remained until 2011, when the Port Authority transferred custody of this and
B. The September 11 Memorial and Museum
The National September 11 Memorial and Museum is located at Ground Zero. The outdoor Memorial recognizes by name each person who lost his or her life in the September 11 attacks, whether in New York, Washington, or Pennsylvania, as well as each person killed in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. 7 The indoor Museum is located primarily underground and directly beneath the Memorial.
In a space of approximately 110,000 square feet, the Museum recounts the history of the September 11 attacks and their aftermath. Some 1,000 objects drawn from a collection of more than 10,000 artifacts are displayed. 8 Some of these objects are small and personal, for example, eyeglasses, an identification card, a pair of shoes, a loved one’s photograph. Others are monumental, such as a 60-foot high section of the World Trade Center’s slurry wall foundation, which, though cracked on September 11, successfully held back the Hudson River, preventing the flooding of lower Manhattan. 9 Other large artifacts include the unique tridents that formed the Twin Towers’ fagade; a 20-foot segment of the communications antenna that stood atop the North Tower; the concrete “Survivors’ Staircase,” down which hundreds fled on September 11 toward the relative safety of Yesey Street; mangled fire trucks and ambulances reflective of the day’s valiant rescue efforts; and a 37-foot high, 58-ton column — the last removed from Ground Zero — bearing a host of inscriptions from many who contributed to rescue and recovery efforts.
Of particular relevance to this appeal is a part of the Museum exhibition entitled “Finding Meaning at Ground Zero.” It is here that The Cross at Ground Zero is displayed. The textual panel for this part of the exhibition provides visitors with the following information:
Workers at Ground Zero struggled to come to terms with the horrific circumstances in which they found themselves. Some sought to counter the sense of utter destruction by holding on to something recognizable, whether a metal boltor shard of glass or a marble salvaged from the debris. Others, grappling with the absence of survivors and the regular recovery of human remains, found purpose by forging relationships with relatives of a particular victim, carrying a photograph or memorial card to bolster their resolve.
Some questioned how such a crime could have been perpetrated in the name of religion, and wrestled with how a benevolent god would permit the slaughter of thousands of innocent people. Many sought comfort in spiritual counseling, religious symbols, and the solace of ceremonies and ritual.
Some workers turned to symbols of patriotism to reinforce a sense of commitment and community, hanging flags across the site. American flags reinforced a sense of commitment and community, and the repeated promise of “God Bless America” inspired a sense of duty. The words “Never Forget” commanded a pledge of unswerving dedication.
Draft Script for Exhibit, Exh. 4 to Patterson Deck, NSMM 2197. Various of the items referenced in this text are themselves displayed, either actually or photographically. Among these is the American flag that an emergency rescue worker secured from nearby Stuyvesant High School and raised on a remnant of the North Tower antenna to provide inspiration for fellow workers. 10 Also displayed are mementos that ironworkers cut from World Trade Center steel and gave as tokens of comfort to other workers and victims’ relatives. These cut-outs have a variety of religious and nonreligious forms, such as the Maltese Cross, the Star of David, a heart, the Twin Towers, and the Manhattan skyline. See id. 2208-09.
Within the “Finding Meaning” section of the Museum, display of The Cross at Ground Zero is accompanied by the following textual explanation:
The Cross at Ground Zero: Icon of [L]oss, Symbol of Hope Recovered by the New York City Building Construction and Trades Council, Courtesy of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
This intersecting steel column and cross beam was found inside the rubble of 6 World Trade Center on the evening of September 13, 2001. Upon entering the area with members of a search and rescue team, construction worker Frank Si-lecchia saw this 17-foot tall column, its horizontal arm draped with a heat-infused piece of air-conditioning vent, standing in a field of debris. Moved by the spiritual presence he felt, Silecchia brought the cross shaped steel to the attention of other workers and members of the clergy.
Perceived of as a religious cross by many who saw it, the steel fragment was relocated to the edge of the site near West Street on October 3, 2001, increasing its visibility and access to both workers and visiting family members. The next day, hundreds working on the recovery attended a ceremonial blessing of the cross by Father Brian Jordan, a Franciscan priest ministering to the Ground Zero community.
Individuals of many faiths and belief systems saw the cross as a symbol of hope, faith, and healing.
It didn’t matter what religion you were, what faith you believed in ... It was life, it was survival, it was the future.... I would say that it represents the human spirit. That it represents good over evil. That it represents how people will care for each other at the worst moment in their life. How people can put aside their differences for the greater good.
Richard Sheirer, former Commissioner of New York City’s Office of Emergency Management, speaking in 2010 about the Cross at Ground Zero
Id. 2198 (boldface and italics in original).
C. Prior Proceedings
American Atheists commenced this action in New York Supreme Court on July 27, 2011. The following month, defendant Foundation removed it to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Following amended pleadings and discovery, the Foundation and the Port Authority moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted on March 28, 2013. Although rejecting the Foundation’s challenge to its characterization as a state actor,
see American Atheists, Inc. v. Port Auth. of N.Y. & N.J.,
This timely appeal followed.
II. Discussion 11
A. Establishment Clause Challenge
The First Amendment states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” U.S. Const, amend. I. The text does not itself define “establishment,” and the term is “not self-defining.”
McCreary Cnty. v. ACLU,
While “neutrality” is thus the “touchstone” of the Establishment Clause, that principle provides more a “sense of direction” than a determinative test.
Id.
at 860, 875,
Lemon
instructs that for challenged government action to satisfy the neutrality principle of the Establishment Clause, it must (1) “have a secular ... purpose,” (2) have a “principal or primary effect ... that neither advances nor inhibits religion,” and (3) “not foster an excessive government entanglement with religion.”
Id.
at 612-13,
1. Purpose
At the first step of analysis, we consider whether appellees’ purpose in displaying The Cross at Ground Zero in the September 11 Museum is secular, both actually and as perceived by an objective observer.
See McCreary Cnty. v. ACLU,
a. Actual Purpose
As a matter of law, the record compels the conclusion that appellees’ actual purpose in displaying The Cross at Ground Zero has always been secular: to recount the history of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and their aftermath. This is evident from correspondence dating to 2006, eight years before the Museum opened. Therein, a Foundation official writes to the executive director
the cross-shaped artifact at Ground Zero [is an] ... important and essential artifact [that] belongs at the World Trade Center site as it comprises a key component of the re-telling of the story of 9/11, in particular the role of faith in the events of the day and, particularly, during the recovery efforts. Its presentation will help to convey, with sensitivity and significance, this critical part of the story to the many visitors expected to come to the site for years to come.
Dykstra Letter to Ringler, 5/11/06, Exh. 1 to Patterson Decl. We generally defer to such a statement of purpose absent some reason to think it is a sham, which is not evident here.
See McCreary Cnty. v. ACLU,
In urging otherwise, American Atheists do not dispute that The Cross at Ground Zero is a genuine historic artifact of recovery and healing efforts after the September 11 attacks. Rather, they contend that appellees’ actual purpose must be religious because the cross’s particular historical significance derives from its religious symbolism and devotional use. In short, because the historical significance of this particular column and cross-beam is as a tangible illustration of the role faith played for many persons in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, appellees’ actual purpose in displaying the artifact must be religious rather than secular. We reject this reasoning.
American Atheists point to no precedent holding that when a religious symbol or artifact with genuine historical significance is included in a public historical display, the actual purpose is necessarily religious promotion. To the contrary, the Supreme Court has long recognized that an accurate account of human history frequently requires reference to religion: “The history of man is inseparable from the history of religion.”
Engel v. Vitale,
Here, appellees’ secular historical purpose in displaying The Cross at Ground Zero is further evident from their docu
[M]embers of the Lower Manhattan Clergy Council and New York Disaster Interfaith Services ... fully endorse our understanding that as a public institution, the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation should present this artifact in a way that tells the story of 9/11 and not as an object of veneration. As a public institution, we will not explicitly offer religious services in association with the artifact. Here again, the Clergy Council was fully and emphatically in agreement.
Dykstra Letter to Ringler, 5/11/06, Exh. 1 to Patterson Decl.
Appellees’ actual secular purpose is also apparent in the display design for The Cross at Ground Zero. As detailed in the above background discussion, see supra at [234-37], a textual panel explains that Ground Zero workers “struggled to come to terms with the horrific circumstances in which they found themselves,” and then documents — as history properly does— various ways that they did so: through human interactions, mementos retrieved from the attack site, religious symbols and ritual, patriotic displays, etc. While The Cross at Ground Zero, the largest artifact displayed to make this point, is a religious symbol that was used in connection with religious rituals at the attack site, the accompanying textual panel is plainly historical rather than theological in recounting the facts of discovery and subsequent use by “[[Individuals of many faiths and belief systems ... as a symbol of hope, faith, and healing.” Draft Script for Exhibit, Exh. 4 to Patterson Deck, NSMM 2198. 13 Indeed, consistent with the historical fact of the cross’s wide adoption by diverse persons, the text makes no mention of the Christian iconography usually associated with a Latin cross. Rather, this particular cross’s broader significance is reflected in a quotation attributed to New York City’s former Commissioner of Emergency Management, who recounts how the cross came to represent “the human spirit,” and “good over evil,” for numerous people, no matter “what religion you were, what faith you believed in.” Id.
Given these documented demonstrations of appellees’ secular historical purpose, the absence of any evidence of ulterior religious motives, and the undisputed historical significance of The Cross at Ground Zero, we conclude that, as a matter of law, the record compels the conclusion that the actual purpose of displaying the cross in the September 11 Museum is a genuine secular interest in recounting the history of extraordinary events.
b. Perceived Purpose
American Atheists maintain that even if appellees’ actual purpose is secular, an “objective observer” would necessarily perceive it to be religious because a Latin cross is an inherently religious symbol, and this particular cross-shaped artifact was used in connection with religious devotions at Ground Zero. 14 The argument is not persuasive. 15
The observer would know also that the cross is displayed in a section of the museum that textually acknowledges various ways — many not religious — that people employed “to come to terms with the horrific circumstances” of September 11. Script for Exhibit, Exh. 4 to Patterson Deck, NSMM 2197. He would know that the textual explanation of The Cross at Ground Zero makes no reference to Christian iconography but, rather, recounts historical facts about the cross’s discovery and use, with particular emphasis on how it came to be seen “as a symbol of hope, faith, and healing” by numerous persons, without regard to their “belief systems.” Id. at 2198.
The observer would know that the absence of any reference to “atheists” in the
We conclude that an objective observer cognizant of all these circumstances could not perceive appellees’ purpose in displaying The Cross at Ground Zero to be religious promotion. Rather, he would necessarily perceive their purpose to be the secular one of providing accurate historical insight into the various means by which people tried to cope with the devastation of the September 11 attacks.
2. Primary Effect
The second prong of the
Lemon
test requires that the “principal or primary effect” of the challenged government action “neither advance nor inhibit religion.”
Skoros v. City of New York,
Justice O’Connor, the principal architect of the “endorsement test,” has explained that endorsement is not limited to government coercion or proselytization; rather, it takes account of “the numerous more subtle ways that government can show favoritism to particular beliefs or convey a message of disapproval to others.”
County of Allegheny v. ACLU,
Endorsement is assessed by reference to a “reasonable observer.” Like the “objective observer,” the “reasonable observer” is “not a particular individual, but ‘a personification of a community ideal of reasonable behavior.’ ”
Skoros v. City of New York,
The observer would further know that, in troubling times, many persons find comfort in prayer and religious rituals,
see School Dist. of Abington Twp. v. Schempp,
Indeed, that conclusion would only be reinforced by the textual panels accompanying the “Finding Meaning” exhibition generally and the cross display in particular. These both (1) identify religious symbols and rituals as among various means that people employed to come to terms with the attacks’ devastation, and (2) emphasize that “[individuals of many faiths and belief systems” viewed The Cross at Ground Zero as a symbol of various positive expressions, i.e., as a symbol of “hope, faith, and healing,” of “the human spirit,” and of “how people will care for each other at the worst moment in their life.” Script for Exhibit, Exh. 4 to Patterson Deck, NSMM 2198.
A reasonable observer would further know that there is no distinct artifact from which atheists, as a group, drew hope and comfort in the aftermath of September 11. Thus, this is not a case in which appellees have chosen to display a symbol of hope embraced by religious believers at Ground Zero while at the same time refusing to display a symbol of hope embraced by nonbelievers at Ground Zero.
Cf. Skoros v. City of New York,
From the totality of these circumstances, a reasonable observer would understand that The Cross at Ground Zero, while having religious significance to many, was also an inclusive symbol for any persons seeking hope and comfort in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. Such an observer would not understand the effect of displaying an artifact with such an inclusive past in a Museum devoted to the history of the September 11 attacks to be the divisive one of promoting religion over nonreligion. Nor would he think the primary effect of displaying The Cross at Ground Zero to be conveying a message to atheists that they are somehow disfavored “outsiders,” while religious believers are favored “insiders,” in the political community.
Lynch v. Donnelly,
Accordingly, we identify no concern with the challenged cross display at the second step of Lemon analysis.
3. Entanglement
Lemon’s final concern — excessive state entanglement with religion— rests on the premise that “both religion and government can best work to achieve their lofty aims if each is left free from the
Thus, to the extent American Atheists rely on their endorsement arguments to complain of excessive entanglement, we have already explained why we find these arguments unpersuasive. In any event, the decision to display an object with religious significance in a public museum does not manifest entanglement unless religious authorities played a role in that decision, for which there is no record evidence here.
Compare Lynch v. Don-nelly,
Entanglement concerns can also arise where extensive monitoring is required to ensure that a public entity is not promoting religion.
See, e.g., Lemon v. Kurtzman,
American Atheists having pointed us to no other way in which Museum display of The Cross at Ground Zero risks excessive entanglement, we conclude that this final Lemon factor raises no concerns.
In sum, because the record demonstrates, as a matter of law, that Museum display of The Cross at Ground Zero does not violate the Establishment Clause, we conclude that judgment was correctly entered in favor of appellees on this First Amendment claim.
B. Equal Protection Challenge
American Atheists contend that appellees’ Museum display of The Cross at Ground Zero denies them equal protection of the laws. Specifically, they contend that a display of the cross without an accompanying atheist recognition plaque discriminates against atheists by “trivializing]” how non-Christians experienced and coped with the events of September 11. Appellants Br. at 30. The claim fails as a matter of law.
As American Atheists acknowledge, appellees’ choice as to which artifacts
Moreover, as the district court correctly concluded, American Atheists fail to adduce evidence from which a reasonable trier of fact could conclude that appellees’ display decisions were animated by discriminatory animus toward atheists.
See Pyke v. Cuomo,
Indeed, a demonstration of intentional discrimination by any of these means is effectively foreclosed by a host of factors including American Atheists’ own acknowl-edgements that The Cross at Ground Zero is a genuine historic artifact warranting display in the Museum’s “Finding Meaning” exhibition, and that no comparable artifact exists to give tangible form to how atheists — as distinct from persons generally, or Christians in particular — came to terms with the September 11 attacks. No reasonable factfinder could conclude that appellees trivialize atheists’ September 11 experience when both the Memorial and the Museum identify every person killed in the attacks of that day without regard to religious affiliation. Further, the Museum’s “Finding Meaning” exhibition respectfully reports that people employed a variety of nonreligious, as well as religious, means to cope with the September 11 attacks. See supra at [235-36, 241-42]. As for the challenged cross, at the same time that a textual panel reports the historical fact that people viewed it as a religious symbol, it also states the further historical fact that still more people, without regard to their religious affiliation, embraced the cross as a broader symbol of hope, life, and the human spirit.
Thus, we conclude that the Equal Protection Clause does not bar appellees from displaying the Cross at Ground Zero in the National September 11 Museum, not does it require them to supplement the Museum’s “Finding Meaning” exhibition with an atheist recognition plaque, as appellants propose.
III. Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude as follows:
1. Displaying The Cross at Ground Zero in the National September 11 Museum does not violate the Establishment Clause because:
a. the stated purpose of displaying The Cross at Ground Zero to tell the story of how some people used faith to cope with the tragedy is genuine, and anobjective observer would understand the purpose of the display to be secular;
b. an objective observer would not view the display as endorsing religion generally, or Christianity specifically, because it is part of an exhibit entitled “Finding Meaning at Ground Zero”; the exhibit includes various nonreligious as well as religious artifacts that people at Ground Zero used for solace; and the textual displays accompanying the cross communicate its historical significance within this larger context; and
c. there is no evidence that the static display of this genuine historic artifact excessively entangles the government with religion.
2. In the absence of any Establishment Clause violation or any evidence of discriminatory animus toward atheists, the Museum did not deny equal protection by displaying The Cross at Ground Zero and refusing plaintiffs’ request to fund an accompanying symbol commemorating atheists.
Accordingly, the district court’s award of summary judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. United Flight 93 crashed in Shanksville only because of the valiant efforts of passengers who prevented the hijackers from reaching their intended objective: the United States Capitol or the White House. See The 9/11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States 13-14 (2004).
. Because American Atheists' federal claims are subject to the same analysis as their state law claims, in this opinion we discuss only the former in explaining our decision to affirm the challenged judgment.
. In a recent supplemental brief requested by this court on the issue of standing, American Atheists attempt to revive their claim that any display of The Cross at Ground Zero in the National September 11 Museum violates the Constitution. Appellants Supp. Br. at 5. They specifically disavowed this argument, however, in their opening brief to this court. See Appellants Br. at 3-5 (“Plaintiffs hope not to see the Cross purged from the Museum, but seek symbolic representation of the non-religious victims and rescue workers....”). Further, they reiterated that disavowal in response to inquiries from this court at oral argument:
Mr. Kagin [Appellants’ counsel]: ... Specifically, what we seek is an object of some sort — even a plaque — that says to the judges of the world, Atheists died here too.... Judge Raggi: ... So the relief you’re looking at is some sort of plaque or other acknowledgment.
Mr. Kagin: Yes.
Judge Raggi: That's it?
Mr. Kagin: That's it.
Oral Arg. Tr. 4:24-5:10. These circumstances manifest waiver of a total display challenge.
See Flores v. S. Peru Copper Corp.,
.The discovery, retrieval, and subsequent use of the column and cross-beam in religious services at Ground Zero are reported not only in the record of this litigation but also in numerous press accounts. See, e.g., Rick Hampson, Ground Zero cross a powerful symbol for 9/11 museum, USA Today, May 15, 2014, http://tinyurl.com/ocszum4 (reporting that Silecchia discovered the cross-shaped column and beam shortly after he had pulled three bodies from the rubble, and quoting Silecchia as saying that the cross was “a sign that God hadn’t deserted us”); Sally Jenkins, 9/11 memorials: The story of the cross at Ground Zero, Wash. Post, Sept. 8, 2011, http:// tinyurl.com/838vdsf (recounting Silecchia's discovery of cross). In conducting Establishment Clause analysis by reference to an objective or reasonable observer cognizant of circumstances surrounding a challenged display, see infra at [240-45], we can assume that observer's familiarity with such accounts and, therefore, we reference them and other similar public materials in this opinion as appropriate.
. Attendance at what came to be known as the "Ground Zero Mass” grew from a handful to as many as 300 and, according to Father Jordan, included people of all faiths and of none at all: "It was a matter of human solidarity. Whether you believed was irrelevant. We needed some type of fellowship down there, other than working." Sally Jenkins, 9/11 memorials: The story of the cross at Ground Zero, Wash. Post, Sept. 8, 2011, http://tin3mrl.com/838vdsf (quoting Father Jordan).
. As Richard Sheirer, then Commissioner of New York City's Office of Emergency Management, later explained, "Intellectually, you knew it's just two pieces of steel, but you saw the impact it had on so many people, and you also knew it was more than steel.” Sally Jenkins, 9/11 memorials: The story of the cross at Ground Zero, Wash. Post, Sept. 8, 2011, http://tinyurl.com/838vdsf; see also infra at [236-37] (quoting Sheirer's statement that "It didn't matter what religion you were, what faith you believed in ... It was life, it was survival, it was the future....”).
. The Memorial consists of a six-acre grove of trees interrupted by two large one-acre voids marking the footprints of the World Trade Center's lost Twin Towers. Each void contains a sunken pool fed from surrounding waterfalls edged by parapet walls. Seventy-six bronze plates are attached to these walls on which are inscribed the names of 2,983 victims. The names are not arranged alphabetically but, rather, according to "relationship,” as evident from persons' proximity to one another at the time of the attacks, their company or organization affiliation, or particular family requests. No distinction is drawn between atheists and religious believers. See 9/11 Memorial Guide, http://names.911 memorial.org (last visited July 28, 2014).
. The record in this case, created before the opening of the Museum, is necessarily predictive as to anticipated displays. Because the parties have not advised us of any material changes between these predictions and the now-open Museum’s actual displays, we assume none, and, thus, describe the Museum in this opinion as predicted in the record.
.Because the cracked slurry wall held on September 11, it too was embraced as a positive symbol "of indomitability and resilience.” Holland Cotter, The 9/11 Story Told at Bedrock, Powerful as a Punch to the Gut, N.Y. Times, May 14, 2014, http://tinjmrl.com/ml3 mudr (reporting Museum planner Daniel Libeskind's view that slurry wall was "soul of his design” because it had "served as a multipurpose symbol of urban recovery, democracy, communal strength, the human spirit, not to mention the virtues of sound engineering”).
. The textual panel for the photograph depicting this flag raising reads: "Former U.S. Marine Rich Miller searched for survivors with fellow members of NYPD's Emergency Service Unit well into the evening of 9/11. The next day, sensing that an American flag would inspire Ground Zero rescuers, he found one at nearby Stuyvesant High School. Aided by firefighters who provided a ladder, Miller scaled a remnant of the North Tower antenna to affix[] the flag.” Draft Script for Exhibit, Exh. 4 to Patterson Deck, NSMM 2205.
. Although neither the Port Authority nor the Foundation challenged American Atheists’ standing to pursue this lawsuit in the district court or on appeal,
amicus curiae
the Becket Fund argues that this jurisdictional requirement is lacking. While we are not required to address arguments raised only by an
ami-cus, see In re Quigley Co.,
. As we have previously observed, although the
Lemon
test has been much criticized, panels of this court are required to follow this precedent.
See Skoros v. City of New York,
. Insofar as American Atheists emphasize the size of the cross in arguing that its display violates the Establishment Clause, the record does not admit the conclusion that appellees chose to exhibit this artifact because its size would most effectively promote religion. Rather, size was what informed rescue workers' identification and recovery of the cross as well as their perception of it as a symbol inspiring hope amid the vast devastation at Ground Zero. In short, size is part of the cross's historical significance, not an indicator that appellees’ actual purpose in displaying it is religious promotion.
. While American Atheists appear to view the question of how an objective observer would view appellees’ purpose as one of fact
. If such an argument were persuasive, the Establishment Clause might prevent display in the National Gallery of any number of artistic masterpieces that were once incorporated into altarpieces or used in religious devotions. See, e.g., Tilman Riemenschneider, "The Münnerstadt Altarpiece” (1490-92) (from Church of Maty Magdalen); Duccio di Buoninsegna, "The Nativity with the Prophets Isaiah and Ezekiel” (1308/1311) (from predel-la of Sienese altarpiece); "Chalice of the Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis” (2d/lst century B.C. (cup); 1137-1140 (mounting)) (vessel used to celebrate mass).
. Awareness of the cited background materials would prevent an objective observer from concluding, as American Atheists urge, that the Port Authority’s agreement to allow The Cross at Ground Zero to be housed at St. Peter’s Church from 2006 to 2011, signals that appellees’ purpose in thereafter displaying the cross in the September 11 Museum was religious promotion. Nor is a different conclusion warranted because clergy blessed the cross before surrendering its possession back to appellees. Rather, when the blessing is considered in light of the referenced correspondence, an objective observer would recognize that ritual as marking the last moment when the cross played a devotional role before assuming a singularly historical one.
. Because American Atheists profess to challenge government speech, endorsement analysis properly applies. See
Capitol Square Review
&
Advisory Bd. v. Pinette,
. See generally President George W. Bush, Remarks at the 9/11 Remembrance Ceremony at the National Cathedral (Sept. 14, 2001), available at http://tmjmrl.com/washpo9142001 ("We come before God to pray for the missing and the dead, and for those who loved them.”); see also Mark Landler & Eric Schmitt, Bush and Obama, Shoulder to Shoulder, N.Y. Times, Sept. 11, 2011, http://tinyurl. com/mua8oqz (reporting that on tenth anniversary of September 11 attacks, President Obama "read from Psalm 46: ‘God is our refuge and strength’ ”).
. The large size of the cross warrants no different conclusion not only because it is only one of a number of massive items displayed, see supra at [235-36], but also because it is by no means obvious that the effect of a large object is always greater than a small one. See Holland Cotter, The 9U l Story Told at Bedrock, Powerful as a Punch to the Gut, N.Y. Times, May 14, 2014, http://tinyurl. com/ml3mudr (observing that largest objects displayed in Museum are "easie[r] to take, maybe because of their public identity, or even their resemblance to contemporary sculpture” than the "hundreds of small, battered personal items ... [ijnfused with lost life”).
