2020年8月10日月曜日

54 Monument Commemorating

54 Monument Commemorating 

Pope John Paul II's Appeal for Peace

Date of completion February 25, 1983

Established by Committee for Monument Commemorating Pope John Paul II's Appeal for Peace

Designer Itto Kuetani (Hiroshima-born sculptor living in Italy) 

Shape

The monument, made of white marble from Carrara, Italy, is engraved with words selected from Pope John Paul II's Appeal for Peace, in both Japanese and English. The monument consists of two joined rectangular stones underneath and an abstract sculpture above. The sculpture, symbolizing the world aspiring to work together for future harmony, stability and coexistence, represents humankind's hope for peace. (1.8 meters wide, 0.9 meters long and 3 meters high) 

Motive for the erection

To transform the Pope's Appeal for Peace into a sculpture that can serve as a source of peace 

Epigraph

War is the work of man.

War is destruction of human life.

War is death.

To remember the past is to commit oneself to the future.

To remember Hiroshima is to abhor nuclear war.

To remember Hiroshima is to commit oneself to peace.


10:30 a.m., 25 February 1981

Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park His Holiness Pope John Paul II 


Noteworthy characteristics 

1. ○ Pope John Paul II's visit to Hiroshima and his Appeal for Peace

On February 25, 1981, Pope John Paul II made his Appeal for Peace in front of the Cenotaph for the A-bomb Victims at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park. The Appeal for Peace, calling for the elimination of nuclear weapons, greatly impressed people all around the world.

In response to a request by many people, including A-bomb survivor Yoshie Fujieda, to create a monument based on the Pope's Appeal for Peace that would serve as a source of peace inspiration, the Committee for Monument Commemorating Pope John Paul II's Appeal for Peace was organized. On February 25, 1983, two years after the Appeal for Peace, an unveiling ceremony for the monument was held in the lobby on the first floor of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. 

広島原爆ドームの光と陰