Hungary's solution for controversial statues: A museum/sculpture park that doesn't glorify but doesn't ignore - Los Angeles Times
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Hungary’s solution for controversial statues: A museum/sculpture park that doesn’t glorify but doesn’t ignore

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BUDAPEST, Hungary — On the outskirts of Budapest, sculptures of heroic workers, waving comrades and triumphant revolutionaries, preside over an empty field.

A giant pair of bronze boots recalls a towering statue of Josef Stalin, toppled during a rebellion against Soviet occupation.

While the U.S. debates the fate of its controversial statues and memorials, Hungary offers a possible solution: It preserves its past in a plaza filled with Communist-era monuments.

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Memento Park acknowledges history without glorifying it. Part-museum, part-outdoor sculpture garden, it attracts busloads of tourists every day during the busy summer season.

When the park opened in 1993, its architect acknowledged the project’s difficult mission: “These statues are both reminders of an anti-Democratic society, and at the same time pieces of our history,†Akos Eleod wrote.

“They are symbols of authority, and at the same time works of art.â€

The analogy to the United States isn’t perfect. Hungarians generally weren’t willing partners with the four-decade Communist dictatorship that followed World War II. The country was one of the first to rebel against the Soviets, launching a revolution in 1956 that was brutally repressed.

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The park takes visitors to the heart of the Soviet era, with soaring statues that functioned as three-dimensional propaganda.

Among the 42 pieces is a rare cubist sculpture of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, authors of the “Communist Manifesto.†There’s also a monument to Soviet friendship, showing a grand Russian soldier reaching out to a humbled Hungarian worker.

The park’s museum building runs a black-and-white film compiled from secret agent training videos, which is both amusing and horrifying.

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Indeed, there is an element of retro kitsch to the entire park. Its Red Star Gift Shop sells Soviet medals, propaganda posters and a “Best of Communism†CD of revolutionary marching music.

But humor, the park suggests, can tame tyranny.

The site’s most striking statue, “To Arms,†shows a Communist revolutionary rushing into battle, a billowing flag in hand. During occupation, Hungarians ridiculed the statue and gave the work another name: “The Cloakroom Attendant.â€

The soldier, they whispered to one another, could just as easily be a restaurant employee chasing after a patron who had forgotten his scarf.

Info: Memento Park

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