The past is never dead. It’s not even past.
William Faulkner
The author evaluates statues and memorial sites around the world – Russia, U.K., France, Philippines, U.S., Netherlands, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Hungary, Italy, China, Poland, Slovenia, Lithuania and Israel. But Canada is left out…
He examines them in terms of their meaning, when they were made, and in our present context. Some were controversial from the moment they were put up, like the “Monument for the Victims of German Occupation” in Budapest, Hungary.
The Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo is offensive to its neighbors far and wide - particularly China and South Korea, who experienced vicious Japanese oppression during the long war, which for them started in 1937.
The “Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe” in Berlin is so abstract that many are perplexed by what it is attempting to convey.
I find the Peace Statue of South Korea to be very poignant, commemorating young women (many just girls) who were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese. It gets the point across.
I liked the idea of Grutas Park in Lithuania where there are old statues of Stalin, Lenin and others in a park where llamas graze and defecate around them. Where has all their power gone now? There are also old rusted armored cars, barbed wire, fake lookout towers and Soviet music.
Page 61 (my book)
In the twenty-first century every nation likes to believe itself a nation of heroes; but deep down, most nations are beginning to think of themselves as victims.
He divides the sites into categories: heroes, martyrs, monsters, apocalypse, and rebirth. He has a poetic phrase on heroes:
Page 71
Heroes are like rainbows: they can only really be appreciated from a distance. As soon as we get too close, the very qualities that make them shine tend to disappear.
There are always dangers of denial. If everyone is a victim, then who are the perpetrators?
Page 78
A nation of martyrs is free to be as selfish as it wishes. Martyrs cannot be criticized.
He also makes an interesting remark that there have been more World War II statues and memorials going up in the last twenty or so years than before.
This book contained surprises for me. I was unaware that across from the towers of Manhattan in New Jersey (of all places), there is a statue commemorating the Polish officers murdered at Katyn by the Soviet NKVD, after their invasion of Poland in 1939.
Also, there is a pilgrimage to the tomb of Mussolini in Predappio, Italy.
The author is most eloquent and perceptive. I did like the black and white photos, even though they were somewhat lacking in quality.
Page 220
When we honor figures like Churchill or Douglas MacArthur we are also remembering the evils that they faced and fought.
Page 263
In the immediate aftermath of the war, the urge to mourn had to compete with the urge to forget.
One of the most interesting concepts is the “Liberation Route Europe” which follows the trails the soldiers took in 1944-45. It goes from London to Normandy with many side-branches to sites in France, Belgium, the Netherlands – and then into Germany. This is still a work in progress, but it seems like a remarkable way to experience and walk in the same footsteps of the Allied soldiers who liberated Western Europe, in what now seems like a long ago era.
I would like to add my own two cents worth. The placement and location of statues has much to do with their impact. In Paris, adjacent to Le Petit Palais, is a statue of Winston Churchill inscribed with his words “We Shall Never Surrender”. This is a very fitting tribute to this Englishman – a staunch symbol of resistance to Nazism during those perilous years.