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Restoring Arlington Cemetery's Reconciliation Monument Is Pivotal For American Greatness | |
2025-08-28 | |
[Federalist] The attack on normalcy, traditions, and history in America intensified in 2020 with Covid-19 lockdowns and the riots catalyzed by the death of George Floyd. When destruction then turned under the Congressional Naming Commission to the icons associated with the Confederacy of the Civil War period, the Reconciliation Monument in Arlington Cemetery came into the crosshairs. It was removed from Arlington on Dec. 16, 2023, despite longstanding traditions and laws against desecrating gravesites. The Reconciliation Monument was the last work of the sculptor Moses Ezekiel, and he chose the monument’s location as his burial ground, making the monument his headstone.
In a recent post on X, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reiterated that the reinstatement of the 1914 Reconciliation Monument, which celebrates the bringing together of the South and the North after decades of post-Civil War division, was important because it fosters the unity of America, and its removal by “woke lemmings” in 2023 was inconsistent with honesty and openness about the past. The secretary added: “Unlike the Left, we don’t believe in erasing American history — we honor it.” The Reconciliation Monument is projected to be restored to Arlington in 2027. Most Americans may not realize the full cultural and spiritual significance of restoring this monument to its rightful place in Arlington Cemetery. In this time of intense spiritual warfare against traditional values and constitutional America, we certainly need to preserve and restore historical monuments. But we also need to go on the offense and uphold the American values that inspired these great markers of history. And the Reconciliation Monument compels such action better than any other monument in Arlington and beyond. HISTORY AND MEANING OF THE MONUMENT The Reconciliation Monument, called by some the Confederate Monument, displays four cinerary urns (one for each year of the Civil War), a frieze of 14 shields representing the 11 Confederate states and the border states of Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri, and 32 life-sized action figures. Most prominent is a Romanesque woman in a flowing gown with a plow and a pruning hook. Lower on the base is inscribed Isaiah 2:4: “They will beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks.” Also prominent are two black figures: an enslaved man following his white owner to war and an enslaved woman depicted as a “mammy” holding a white officer’s child. While critics can say that such portrayal romanticizes slavery, these figures are shown as enslaved individuals in subservient roles, reflecting an historically accurate view of slavery in America at that time. More than any other monument in Arlington Cemetery, the Reconciliation Monument captures the essence of what makes America great: the willingness to see our faults, forgiving our transgressors, the quest for unity, and the celebration of beauty and freedom. Also noteworthy is that while some have called it the Christmas Monument because of the Christian values it represents, the Reconciliation Monument was conceived, designed, and executed by the distinguished Jewish sculptor Ezekiel, who had served in the Civil War. In the foremost rank of American sculptors, Ezekiel made the ideals of the spiritual and godly, the Greek sense of beauty, and the American outlook of freedom uniquely visible through his sculptural works. Related: Reconciliation Monument 08/08/2025 Righting A Symbolic Wrong-Hegseth Returning Civil War Memorial Removed By Biden To Arlington National Cemetery Reconciliation Monument 12/18/2023 The desecration of Arliington National Cemetary - Is Gettysburg next ? | |
Posted by:NoMoreBS |