Emma Margolin
As the U.S. grapples with how to intervene in a distant
conflict that has claimed the lives of more than 70,000 Syrians, an art
installation in the heart of the nation’s capital brings home the
realities of mass atrocities and genocide.
Presented by the Art of Revolution, a social advocacy organization, the project
One Million Bones
drew thousands of volunteers together on Saturday at the National Mall
in Washington, D.C. Dressed in white, these artists and activists lay
down 1 million handcrafted bones as a “visible petition” against the
ongoing struggle in Sudan, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Burma, Somalia, and Syria.
Though the bones are artificial, they attest to the voices, lives, and experiences shaped by genocide that are undeniably human.
“Bones are evidence of a unique, individual journey,” said the Archbishop Desmond Tutu in a
video posted on the project’s website.
“But they are also the evidence of a collective journey, a story shared
in the human experience…It is my hope that these bones will transform
us, bringing us to a place of greater understanding and compassion, and
inspire us to act.”
One Million Bones can be found at the National Mall in Washington, D.C., through Monday.
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The One Million Bones installation on the National Mall in Washington DC, USA. (Photo Courtesy of Teru Kuwayama) |
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The One Million Bones installation on the National Mall in Washington DC, USA. June 8, 2013. (Photo Courtesy of Teru Kuwayama) |
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Volunteers setting up The One Million Bones installation on the National
Mall in Washington DC, USA. June 8, 2013. (Photo Courtesy of Teru
Kuwayama) |
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Buddhist monks viewing The One Million Bones installation on the
National Mall in Washington DC, USA. (Photo Courtesy of Teru Kuwayama) |
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Vistors at The One Million Bones installation on the National Mall in
Washington DC, USA. June 8, 2013. (Photo Courtesy Teru Kuwayama) |
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The One Million Bones installation on the National Mall in Washington DC, USA. June 8, 2013 (Photo Courtesy of Teru Kuwayama) |
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Installation artist, Naomi Natale, at the site of her One Million Bones
installation on the National Mall in Washington DC, USA. (Photo Courtesy
of Teru Kuwayama) |
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