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Making Crazy Horse: The Role of a Lifetime

Culture
United States
Started July 19, 2026

Majestic art in the Badlands, a compelling vision, what a subject, what an artist

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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
The memorial's educational mission and museum reach millions of visitors annually with Native American history that would otherwise be overlooked.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
Public funding decisions about the Crazy Horse Memorial should weigh its cultural significance against documented impact on the Black Hills ecosystem and Native sacred sites.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
Completing the Crazy Horse Memorial as designed would permanently alter one of the most sacred natural landscapes to Indigenous peoples.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
Any monument to Native American leaders must be designed and controlled by Native American tribes, not by individual sculptors or outside foundations.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse monument can serve as a bridge for dialogue between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse Memorial represents the most significant Native American monument project and should be completed as Korczak Ziolkowski envisioned it.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
Major public art projects require transparent governance structures that include affected communities in core decisions, whether or not they proceed.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse monument risks commodifying Indigenous culture for commercial gains.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse monument oversimplifies complex Indigenous histories into a single narrative.
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CLAIM Posted by admin Jul 19, 2026
The artistic vision behind Crazy Horse showcases the profound impact of monumental art on cultural identity.
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