By MARTA FALCONI
Associated Press Writer
ROME - An Italian
judge has dismissed an atheist's petition that a small-town priest
should stand trial for asserting that Jesus Christ existed, both sides
said on Friday.
Luigi Cascioli, a 72-year-old retired
agronomist, had accused the Rev. Enrico Righi of violating two laws
with the assertion, which he called a deceptive fable propagated by the
Roman Catholic Church.
"The Rev. Righi is very satisfied and moved," Righi's attorney,
Severo Bruno, said. "He is an old, small-town parish priest who never
would have thought he'd be in the spotlight for something like this."
Cascioli, a former schoolmate of Righi's, said he had not expected the case to succeed in overwhelmingly Roman Catholic Italy.
"This is not surprising but it doesn't mean it all ends here," he
said, adding that he's considering taking the case to the European
Court of Human Rights.
"This is an important case and it deserves to go ahead," he said.
Judge Gaetano Mautone said in his decision that prosecutors should investigate Cascioli for possible slander.
The ruling was released Thursday in Viterbo, a town north of Rome
where the priest is based. Cascioli filed a criminal complaint against
Righi in 2002 after Righi wrote in a parish bulletin that Jesus
existed, that he was born to a couple named Mary and Joseph in
Bethlehem and that he lived in Nazareth.
Righi, 76, said substantial historical evidence proves Jesus' existence.
Cascioli claimed that Righi's assertions violated two Italian laws:
one barring "abuse of popular belief," or fraudulently deceiving
people; and another barring "impersonation" or personal gain from
attributing a false name to someone.
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