
Celebration of Life - Columbus, Ohio
Posted by:
Mr. 0
N 39° 57.702 W 083° 00.406
17S E 328601 N 4425434
A sculpture depicting a woman lifting a child. Located near Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Columbus, Ohio
Waymark Code: WM91GA
Location: Ohio, United States
Date Posted: 06/13/2010
Views: 13
This sculpture was created by Alfred Tibor, who is a holocaust survivor. It depicts a woman lifting a child over her head, and tells the story of early life in the town of Franklinton which grew into the city of Columbus.
The plaque on the front reads:
"Celebration of Life
Arthur Boke Jr. was the first African-American resident of Franklinton, Ohio. His story tells far more than the color of his skin. It is a story of love, selflessness, compassion, and understanding expressed by Sarah Sullivant. Her example reaches out to humanity with a mother's pure love that accepts all human beings as equal, who share each other's burdens, listen to each other's stories, and learn what it is to live in harmony.
It was Sarah Sullivant, who with her husband Lucas - founder of Columbus, made the story of Arthur Boke Jr.
In 1803, Sarah had just given birth to a son, when several days later she found at her doorstep an abandoned baby of a slave. It is what happened next that lifts the story into the rare.
Sarah, filled with the love for her own new-born son, could not bear to leave the abandoned baby without help. Urged on by a humanity very seldom seen in those days, she took the baby, and along with her own new son, nursed both to a strong and healthy childhood.
Named Arthur Boke Jr. by the Sullivants, the baby was adopted by the family and lived as a son and brother until his passing in 1841. The Sullivant children, especially Joseph, whom Arthur helped raise as a loved brother, made sure Arthur was buried in the family plot. It was a testament to Arthur's inclusion in the Sullivant family. It was an example for future generations that love bridges even the deepest of divides.
Presented here as a modern tribute to the Sullivant's expression of love is "Celebration of Life," a sculpture celebrating the family's deed, and enshrined in bronze, a symbol of how all humankind can make this a better world, one child at a time.
2004"
Another plaque on the side reads:
"I am a survivor of the Holocaust, the worst genocide in history.
Hatred is destruction
I gained freedom when I came to the United States of America.
I donated this work to tell coming generations; "Freedom, hope and respect, celebrate life."
- Alfred Tibor - Sculptor