Vrijheids museum - Groesbeek, NL
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member PetjeOp
N 51° 47.169 E 005° 56.213
31U E 702557 N 5741334
In het GEDENKPARK CANADA-NEDERLAND bij de het vrijheidsmuseum in Groesbeek staat op de heuvel bij een bankje en omringt door bomen een vredespaal.
Waymark Code: WM19HNK
Location: Gelderland, Netherlands
Date Posted: 03/03/2024
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member adgorn
Views: 2

In the CANADA-NETHERLANDS MEMORIAL PARK near the freedom museum in Groesbeek, there is a peace pole on the hill near a bench surrounded by trees.

"The idea of peace poles was first thought up by Masahisa Goi in 1955 in Japan. The peace pole project today is promoted by The World Peace Prayer Society as well as other groups and individuals. The first peace poles outside Japan were constructed in 1983. Since then, more than 200,000 have been placed around the world in close to 200 countries.

Peace poles are made of many materials; most are made of wood, while others are made of limestone, copper, plastic or stainless steel. The text might be painted, carved, etched, welded, pasted, or riveted on, or it might simply be a plastic plaque attached with screws. In other cases, it is the careful work of an artist or sculptor.

Sometimes the word prayer is avoided so that peace poles are not regarded as religious objects therefore violating zoning restrictions. For example, a Quaker group in New York City ran into this problem year after year, and did not get permission to plant a peace pole in a park.[citation needed] Some manufacturers refer to the wording as a Peace Message for this reason.

Peace poles have been placed in such notable locations as the north magnetic pole, the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, the site of the Egyptian pyramids in Giza, and the Aiki Shrine in Iwama, Japan.[3] Peace poles are commonly installed at high-profile public gathering places, such as community parks or near the entrances of churches or schools. In one case, a garden, created for a wedding, was designed around the peace pole that was its centerpiece. The Republic of Molossia, a micronation, has a peace pole in eight languages. The University of California, Los Angeles has a limestone peace pole with 14 languages directly in front of Kerckhoff Hall.

The initial inspiration for planting a peace pole often is as a response to a local historic hate crime, incident or issue. The world's second-largest peace pole, at 52 feet (16 m), is located in Janesville, Wisconsin, at the site of a 1992 KKK rally (Saturday, May 30). Another of the largest peace poles in the world, as measured in tons, is the granite peace pole in Beech Acres Park[10] near Cincinnati, Ohio, inspired by hate literature left in the driveways of Jewish residents.

In September 2016, the World Peace Prayer Society and the Little Free Library project announced a collaboration to offer a new peace pole library structure. It features the standard peace pole message of peace – "May Peace Prevail on Earth" – in a six-foot library. Some of these new libraries were installed at locations significant to the civil rights movement, such as the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama.

A former grain elevator in Minneapolis is painted as a gigantic peace pole"
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Languages: Netherlands, English, French, German

Made of: Metal

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