This is where you're wrong. It does have a well documented
history tied to the WTC cleanup efforts.
the firefighter who’s pushing for the beam’s inclusion in the memorial, Princeton Deputy Chief Roy James, said the cross can be seen as separate from the Christian religion.
“I’m a Jew,” he said on Fox News. “Ironically, I’m fighting to have this cross there because I believe that someone’s story is behind that. That story needs to be told. It has nothing to do with religious faith. It has to do with telling history.”
story
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The guy is even Jewish!
further:
In addition, a documentary film titled The Cross and The Towers, which was released in 2006, tells the story of the 9/11 World Trade Center Cross. It has won a "number of awards, including the Audience Choice Award at Palm Beach International Festival, Best Film at Gloria Film Festival, Crystal Heart at Heartland Film Festival and finalist in the USA FilmFestival.[19][20][21]
In 2013, the "U.S. District Judge Deborah Batts concluded Thursday that the 17-foot-high cross, which became a spiritual symbol for workers at ground zero, does not amount to an endorsement of Christianity." Joseph Daniels, the President and CEO of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum at the World Trade Center Foundation, welcomed the court decision to continue the display of the cross, stating "is in fact a crucial part of the 9/11 Memorial Museum's mission."[22] Furthermore, Mark Alcott, the lawyer of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum at the World Trade Center Foundation, which fought the court case against the American Atheists stated that "The museum is gratified by the decision."[23]
The potential use of the cross in the World Trade Center Memorial has been controversial. Many groups such as families of certain Christian victims want the cross to be included.[24] Other organizations disagree, notably the American Atheists (who have filed suit pertaining to this issue)[25] as well as the Coalition for Jewish Concerns.[26] Alternatively, the Anti-Defamation League issued a statement that it "fully supports the inclusion in the National September 11 Memorial & Museum of the metal beams in the shape of a cross found in the rubble at Ground Zero in the aftermath of the tragic attacks on 9/11." |
You may be ignorant of the history behind this particular piece of salvaged rubble but that doesn't change the reality of the history behind it and the meaning it has for people of all faiths actually involved in the WTC cleanup efforts.