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Volume 5, May 2003

ISSN 1538-893X

Ten of the World’s Great War Memorials

by Patrick Totty

Visit CulturalTravels.com Web SiteAt the beginning of the 21st century it is obvious that war will be with our species for a while longer. America’s war on terrorism, Israel’s struggle for survival, the ongoing confrontation between India and Pakistan, China’s belligerence toward Taiwan and northern Sudan’s armed enslavement of the southern Sudanese, among others, all bespeak a world where violent conflict is all too common.

If war is still a sad accompaniment of human existence, it follows that our children will at some point construct new monuments memorializing some armed struggle, much as our parents built the memorials at Normandy and the Baby Boom generation built the Vietnam Memorial. These poignant artifacts will continue to tug at us and remind us of the costs of hostile struggle.

It would be folly to say that one monument honors war’s suffering and sacrifice better than any other. Though all wars are alike in that they are armed conflicts between bitter foes, their rationales, duration, effects and aftermaths are all different.

That is why some monuments honor losing causes or even people who never raised arms against their enemies. Others honor Pyrrhic victories or struggles where soldiers fell needlessly en masse, thanks to the orders of their inept or oblivious generals.

Here we note 10 of the world’s most moving memorials to war. They are not the only 10 that could be cited. But they commemorate wars that for whatever reason left an indelible mark on the people who suffered through them. The rest of the world takes notice.

A special note of thanks to Patrick Totty our editor, for making this issue possible. His devotion to research is only surpassed by his style and literate delivery. Sheri Leigh, Publisher

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