This statue was made by an Iraqi artist named
Kalat, who for years was forced by Saddam Hussein to make the many
hundreds of bronze busts of Saddam that dotted Baghdad.
It is
currently on display outside the Iraqi palace that is now home to the
4th Infantry division. It will eventually be shipped and shown at the
memorial museum in Fort Hood, Texas.
This artist was so grateful that the Americans liberated his country; he melted 3 [actually 2, see below] of
the fallen Saddam heads and made a memorial statue dedicated to the American soldiers and
their fallen comrades.
Kalat has been working on this night
and day for several months.
To the left of the kneeling soldier is a small Iraqi girl giving the
soldier comfort as he mourns the loss of his comrade in arms.
The above was received via email. Further research
found the facts below on the 4th Infantry Division, Fort Hood, TX
website, as well as several others:
Story by Spc. Benjamin R. Kibbey, 367th Mobile Public
Affairs Detachment
Dec. 10, 2003
FORWARD
OPERATING BASE, Tikrit, Iraq – When he was forced to fashion statues of
Saddam Hussein on horseback, the Iraqi sculptor had no idea that
someday he would melt them down to create a memorial for American
soldiers.
The
two original statues, which adorned a gate at the palace complex where
4th ID’s headquarters group is located were removed with explosives in
early July, said 1st Sgt. Mark Anderson, the Headquarters and
Headquarters Company first sergeant and Roseland, La. native. Anderson
has monitored the memorial project’s progress since the end of July.
The
toppled statues were cut up into pieces by members of the 555th
Engineer Group and spirited quietly to the artist, Kalat, who reshaped
the chunks of bronze into a likeness of an American soldier being
comforted by a small girl as he mourns a fallen comrade.
In
July, 1st Sgt. Glen Simpson, former HHC first sergeant, knelt for the
picture that has become an immortal portrait in bronze, said Sgt. Maj.
Chuck Fuss, the division sergeant major who resides in Killeen, Texas.
The
artist, who fears retaliation from former regime loyalists for his work
with the Coalition, spent several months sculpting and casting the
statue. Though he created the original statues of Saddam along with
another artist, he created the 4th ID memorial through his own design,
said Anderson.
The
sculpture is based on a scene many in Iraq have witnessed in one form
or another. A soldier kneels before a memorial of boots, rifle and
helmet – his forehead resting in the hollow of his hand. Behind and to
his right stands a small Iraqi girl with her hand reaching out to touch
his shoulder.
The
little girl portrays, in her eyes and presence, a sympathy mixed with
gratitude. She was added to remind people of why the sacrifice was
made, Fuss said.
“It’s
about freedom for this country, but it’s also about the children who
will grow up in a free society,” he said.
Sitting
in a former palace of Saddam now, the statue will soon be shuttled to
Fort Hood, where it will become part of a larger memorial project at
the 4th Infantry Division Museum. There, plaques will be hung in memory
of those Task Force Ironhorse soldiers who have given their lives in
Iraq.
The
memorial planned for the Fort Hood museum is projected to cost between
$30,000 and $40,000, and is scheduled to be completed July 2004. It is
being paid for partly through donations from soldiers of Task Force
Ironhorse, said Fuss. There is also an ongoing effort by the 4th
Infantry Division Association of Fort Hood to raise money from private
contributors.
The
cost of the new statue, which is about $18,000, was paid for through
small donations from the soldiers of the 4th ID, according to Anderson.
Fuss
and Anderson credited the soldiers’ generosity and Simpson’s vision for
the lasting gift that, in the end, remembers fallen comrades.
“I
think this is the best way we can honor their families and their
memories,” Fuss said.
“Really that's what it's for – a tribute
to all the soldiers over here that lost their lives,” Anderson said.
“They will never be forgotten and they will always be heroes in our
eyes.”
(Spc.
Benjamin R. Kibbey is a member of the 367th Mobile Public Affairs
Detachment, an Army Reserve unit from Columbus, Ohio. He is currently
deployed to Southwest Asia with the 4th Infantry Division in support of
Operation Iraqi Freedom)
Photo
Note 1: A memorial to the fallen soldiers of 4th Infantry
Division stands in a former palace of Saddam Hussein that currently
serves as the division headquarters. The statue was created from the
remains of two statues of Saddam that 4th ID destroyed in July, [2003].
Photo Note
2: Kalat, a local Iraqi artist, pauses to look at a
memorial he has been working on to honor the fallen soldiers of 4th
Infantry Division. The new statue stands in a former palace of Saddam
Hussein that currently serves as the 4th ID headquarters at Forward
Operating Base Ironhorse.
from: http://www.hood.army.mil/4id/Iraqi/news_content/memstatue.asp
