Warring factions hold truce to allow giant bronze creation to be set up
overlooking ancient pilgrimage route
A London-based charity has erected
a giant bronze statue of Jesus on a Syrian hilltop after organising a truce
between warrring factions to safeguard its passage from Lebanon.
The statue stands, arms
outstretched, on the Cherubim mountain, overlooking a route pilgrims took from
Constantinople to Jerusalem in ancient times. The statue is 12.3 metres (40ft)
tall and stands on a base that brings its height to 32 metres.
The delivery of the statue is the
result of eight years work which has been set back by the civil war that
followed the March 2011 uprising against President Bashar al-Assad.
Christians and other minorities
are all targets in the conflict, and the statue's safety is not guaranteed. It
stands among villages where some fighters, linked to al-Qaida, have little
sympathy for Christians.
Project organiser Samir al-Ghadban
said it was worth erecting the statue, created by an Armenian sculptor, because
"Jesus would have done it".
Ghadban said the main armed groups
in the area – Syrian government forces, rebels and the local militias of
Sednaya, the Christian town near the statue site – stopped fighting for three
days while the statue was erected.
Photos provided by organisers show
it being hauled in two pieces by farm tractors, then lifted into place by a
crane. Smaller statues of Adam and Eve stand nearby.
The project, called I Have Come to
Save the World, is run by the London-based St Paul and St George Foundation, of
which Ghadban is the director. It was previously named the Gavrilov Foundation,
after the Russian businessman Yuri Gavrilov.
Documents filed with the Charity
Commission describe it as supporting "deserving projects in the field of
science and animal welfare" in England and Russia, but the commission's
accounts show it spent less than £250 in the last four years. Ghadban said most
of the financing came from private donors.
Russians have been a driving force behind the statue project.
The Kremlin is the chief ally of the embattled Assad, and the Orthodox churches
in Russia and Syria have
close ties.
Ghadban, who is Syrian-Russian and
lives in both countries, said he hoped the statue, which was inspired by Rio de
Janeiro's Christ the Redeemer statue, would in turn inspire Syria's Christians.
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