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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Tuesday that “The Recripation Memorial,” a Confederate Memorial, Arlington would return to the National Cemetery.
Hegseth wrote on X, “I am proud to declare that Moses EJICL’s beautiful and historic sculpture – often referred to as” the juicy monument ” – will return to the Arlington National Ceraft near its burial site.”
National Park Service announced
A Confederate Memorial, a Confederate Memorial, on August 17, 2017 at Arlington, Virginia, was photographed at Arlington, Virginia at Arlington National Cemetery. The memorial is being taken back to the cemetery after being removed during Biden administration. (Kaila Casler/The Washington Post through Getty Image)
The memorial was removed by the Pentagon in 2023 and moved to the storage facility of a defense department in Virginia to remove the idols and change the names of military establishments honoring the conferencing data.
Hegseth said, “This should never have been taken by Vok Lamings. Unlike the Left, we do not believe in eradicating American history – we respect it,” Hegseth said.
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The soldier pays respect in the Arlington National Cemetery. (Vera Mandel through shield communication)
At the time when the monument was removed, GOP MPs said that it does not respect Confeed, but instead, reconciliation and national unity.
The memorial was unveiled in 1914 by the then President Woodrow Wilson, after the commission was commissioned by the joint daughters. The Congress had authorized the renovation of confederate remains for the Arlington National cemetery only 14 years ago.
The EJIL was a Jewish American sculptor who fought for Confederassi during the Civil War. After the war, General Robert E. Lee encouraged him to become a sculptor, and according to the Smithsonian American Art Museum, he participated in the Virginia Military Institute and studied anatomy.
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He is also buried with respect in Arlington.