“Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet” – A Film Created and Produced by Alex Kronemer and Michael Wolfe

Originally aired on PBS to a word-wide audience exceeding 150 million people

“CANDID, THOUGHTFUL AND VISUALLY STUNNING” – Los Angeles Times

Prophet Muhammad (s.a.s) changed world history in 23 years and continues to shape and inspire the lives of more than 1.4 billion Muslims around the world.

Simerg is pleased to make available for its readers around the world a link to the film, Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet, that was originally aired on PBS to a world-wide audience exceeding 150 million people.  The internet age is a blessing of our time that, through outstanding movies such as this, we are able to learn more about the wonderful and noble qualities of  Prophet Muhammad. In his Presidential Address to the Seerat Conference in 1976, His Highness the Aga Khan had asked:

“In the face of this changing world, which was once a universe to us and is now no more than an overcrowded island, confronted with a fundamental challenge to our understanding of time, surrounded by a foreign fleet of cultural and ideological ships which have broken loose, I ask, ‘Do we have a clear, firm and precise understanding of what Muslim Society is to be in times to come?’ And if as I believe, the answer is uncertain, where else can we search then in the Holy Qur’an, and in the example of Allah’s last and final Prophet?”

 His Highness continued:

“The Holy Prophet’s life gives us every fundamental guideline that we require to resolve the problem as successfully as our human minds and intellects can visualise. His example of integrity, loyalty, honesty, generosity both of means and of time, his solicitude for the poor, the weak and the sick, his steadfastness in friendship, his humility in success, his magnanimity in victory, his simplicity, his wisdom in conceiving new solutions for problems which could not be solved by traditional methods, without affecting the fundamental concepts of Islam, surely all these are foundations which, correctly understood and sincerely interpreted, must enable us to conceive what should be a truly modern and dynamic Islamic Society in the years ahead.”

Some of these examples from the Prophet’s life come alive through this ground-breaking PBS film, which takes the viewers from the ancient Arabian sites where Prophet Muhammad’s story unfolded to the homes, mosques, and workplaces of some of America’s estimated seven million Muslims. The Los Angeles Times called the film “a candid, thoughtful, flowing, visually stunning film,” while The Catholic News Service commented that the Prophet’s biography offers viewers fresh insights into the spiritual foundations of Islam.

Simerg is grateful to Daniel Tutt of upf.tv for facilitating the showing of the film though this website. We strongly encourage all the viewers to watch the complete film, if not in one seating then by watching the timed segmented clips which will open at the bottom of the viewing window. We are sure you will enjoy this film. Please click:

Readers who wish to watch a preview of the film and other selected clips before viewing the full-length movie are invited to click http://www.muhammadfilm.tv or on the following image:

Please click for links to full length movie and excerpts

In Gratitude to Hasan-i-Sabbah by Jalaledin Ebrahim

“…[Hasan-i-Sabbah] is officially welcomed by representatives of the Imam because of his referral by the chief dai of Persia. There is no evidence of an official meeting with the Imam of the Time, but there is also no evidence that he does not receive a glimpse of the Imam. But even if that is not possible to substantiate, he certainly has the opportunity to make a pragmatic and sagacious assessment of the Fatimid political system…” Continue reading Thanking Ismaili Historical Figures: Hasan-i-Sabbah

Please click for article

The Siege of Timbuktu by Jocelyne Sambira

“…..The Islam that the scholars of Timbuktu taught the world was (and remains) a profoundly humanist tradition. On humble wooden boards…children learned the words that Muslims believe to be God’s verbatim speech, and with it a deep respect for Him, and His most noble creation, the children of Adam….” says Rudolph Ware in an excellent piece in the Huffington Post. But, as Ware notes, Timbuktu has for some months been under siege from a radical group calling itself  Ansar Dine (“Protector of the Faith”).

In our piece, with links to the Huffington Post and other articles on the subject, Jocelyne Sambira of AfricaRenewal explains what is going on in Northern Mali’s City of Saints…..”Using hoes, pick-axes and chisels, they [Ansar Dine] hammered away at the two earthen tombs until they were completely destroyed.” Read more….Timbuktu Under Siege.

Djinguereber mosque in Timbuktu. Members of the group Ansar Dine have destroyed some of the mosque’s mausoleums, along with other holy shines in the ancient northern city. Photo: Wikipedia.

Sufi Monuments in Konya and Blagaj, and a Bookshop in Paris by Gulshan Chunara

Rumi’s Tomb in Konya, a Dervish Monastery in Bosnia, and an Iconic Bookstore in Paris

Please click for Gulshan Chunara’s piece on Sufi Monuments and Shakespeare and Company

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Forthcoming:
Thank You Letter to Hasan bin Sabah by Jalaledin Ebrahim, USA

On Simerg’s Photo Blog: Mausoleums of Ismaili Pirs, Karim Master’s Rahe Rast, His Highness the Aga Khan, Alamut, Fatimid Glass, Iran and Jerusalem

Photoblog

Three gold quarter dinars of the Fatimid Imam-Caliph al-Hakim were among the Fatimid objects found in a shipwreck in Turkey. Please visit Simerg’s new photo blog. Click on image. Photo credit: Institute of Nautical Archaeology.

Click Photoblog or on the links shown below

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Forthcoming on Simerg.com

1. Sufi Shrines and a Bookshop in Paris by Gulshan Chunara, England

2. Thank You Letter to Hasan bin Sabah by Jalaledin Ebrahim, USA

3. Thank You Letter to al-Mu’ayyad fi’l-Din al-Shirazi by Jehangir Merchant, Canada

A Six Year Old Girl’s Tender Story from the Diamond Jubilee of His Highness the Aga Khan: “Mawla Fulfilled My Wish” by Sakerkhanu Gulamhusain

The auspicious day for the Didar of Hazrat Imam Sultan Mahomed Shah finally arrived, and words are inadequate to express the joy and thrill that I felt within myself. Students came in turns to present their wonderful recitals before the Jamat. I was dressed in my lovely white dress, and as my name was called out I went up on the stage and stood before the mike to present the poem that I had learnt and practiced so well. Just as I finished my recitation, there was a deafening ovation from the Jamat, accompanied with the resounding claps and shouts of “once more, once more”…..Read More

“Mawla Fulfilled My Wish”

Please click on image for “Mawla Fulfilled My Wish”

A Treasure Trove of Photo Essays from Around the World: A New Blog by Simerg

Simerg is pleased to announce the creation of a separate blog dedicated to photographs and photo essays. While many of the pieces may at first appear (or have appeared) on Simerg.com, an adapted version with a greater emphasis on the photo content will be created in the new sister blog http://simergphotoblog.wordpress.com/.

Click to visit the photoblog

The new blog is being launched with Muslim and Nevin Harji’s highly acclaimed piece about Jerusalem, Ali M Rajput’s unique photos of Alamut, photos of the discovery of Fatimid artefacts in an 11th century shipwreck as well as a photo essay about His Highness the Aga Khan and the Ismaili community. The new blog will be a treasure trove of  superb photos and photo essays from around the world, and will please photo enthusiasts everywhere. Please click on http://simergphotoblog.wordpress.com/ to visit the blog.

Photo Essay: 2 Award Winning Aga Khan Projects in the Mountainous Areas of Pakistan

An apricot, poplar and mountain stream at Garam Chasma in Northern Pakistan. Photo: © Ashden Awards

Introduction: This photo essay is about two Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) Agencies that have won the prestigious Ashden Awards for improving the quality of life in Northern Pakistan. The Aga Khan Planning and Building Services, Pakistan (AKPBS, P) and the Aga Khan Rural Support Programme, Pakistan (AKRSP, P), won the awards in 2011 and 2004 respectively and Simerg is pleased to produce a brief account of the work of the two agencies along with a collection of related photographs, reproduced with the kind permission of the Ashden Awards. Readers are also invited to click on links provided at the end of this piece to watch a very informative and interesting presentation (just under 6 minutes in length) about the AKPBS project.

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Aga Khan Planning and Building Service, Pakistan: Winner of the 2011 Ashden International Award for Avoided Deforestation

Warming homes, saving trees

“A proper home can bridge that terrible gap between poverty and a better future” – His Highness the Aga Khan

Princess Zahra Aga Khan speaking at the 2011 Ashden Awards. Photo: © Ashden Awards

The Hindu Kush and Karakoram mountains lie in Northern Pakistan. Winters in the mountains are harsh and natural disasters are part of life. Lack of gas supply pushes almost all rural households in the region to use wood-burning stoves and open fires or simple wood-burning stoves indoors for cooking and heating.

Although many families have woodlots in the valleys, deforestation is serious on the mountain sides, where trees play a vital role in stabilising the slopes’. Photo: © Ashden Awards

Over 14 years ago, the Aga Khan Planning and Building Service (AKPBS) began a concerted drive to make homes in North Pakistan warmer, and reduce the use of wood. Based on the Aga Khan’s belief that: “A proper home can bridge that terrible gap between poverty and a better future,” the programme has done just that for over 240,000 people.

Model stoves for different districts, and a water warming barrel. Photo: © Ashden Awards

Today over 100 ‘resource people’ work in their own villages promoting energy-efficient products. A US$80 package could include floor insulation, an efficient cook stove with a chimney to let smoke out, a water heater, and a roof hatch window that cuts out draughts and lets in light, also fresh air when needed.

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The Basic Features of the Stove

Stove designs vary in detail from region to region,to suit local cooking requirements, but all have the same basic features. The stove is made from sheet metal and can be used for two cooking pots at the same time,while seated on the floor. Wood is added to the combustion chamber through a side door,which is then closed to limit airflow. A chimney takes the smoke out of the room. Insulated tiles are sometimes used around the stove body to cut heat loss and improve cooking efficiency during the summer, then removed for the four to seven winter months when room heating is needed.

Stoves are made locally providing income for small businesses. Photo: © Ashden Awards

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Cooking Stove. Photo: © Ashden Awards

The stove was tested by Aprovecho Research Centre in 2008, and meets the Shell Foundation benchmarks for an ‘improved ’stove. A number of changes that would improve its energy efficiency have been tried, but do not suit stove users or else add too much to the cost.

Stove in use, House of Bibi Navida (right), Haiderabad, Hunza Valley. “For a working woman like me it’s great. I can go to the market in the morning, and then come back and there is hot water ready to do the laundry.” Bibi Safina, Ishkoman Valley, resource person who has promoted products for ten years. Photo: © Ashden Awards.

The Stove and Water-Warming in Nagar valley

Water-warming facilities use a metal pipe that runs around the inside rim at the top of the stove. Water in the pipe is heated by the burning wood, and circulates by natural convection to a 150-litre plastic storage barrel. Water is heated while cooking takes place, so additional wood is not needed. A tap in the barrel provides water at a suitable temperature for washing clothes or dishes, or to fill pots for boiling on the stove. The storage barrel is generally not insulated, because the water does not need to reach a very high temperature

Improved stove in use in Nagar valley, with ability to keep water warm in a nearby barrel. Photo: © Ashden Awards.

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The Roof Hatch and Window

Roof hatch windows are made from toughened glass mounted in a wooden frame. The window fits into the hole in the roof that was previously needed to take smoke out of the house. A cord is used to open and close the window, to provide ventilation particularly in the short, hot summer. The roof hatch windows play a very important role in retaining heat inside the house during cold winters.

Coiner making roof hatches, Gilgit, North Pakistan. Photo: © Ashden Awards

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A roof hatch window. Photo: © Ashden Awards.

“Now there’s no trouble with rain or dust or flies – we just open the hatch if it’s too hot and close it if it’s too cold. It’s as simple as that.” Bibi Navida Khan, Hunza Valley.

Roof hatch window installed. “Now there’s no trouble with rain or dust or flies – we just open the hatch if it’s too hot and close it if it’s too cold. It’s as simple as that.” Bibi Navida Khan, Hunza Valley, who has stove, water-warmer, roof hatch and floor insulation. Photo: © Ashden Awards

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Insulation

Insulated walls. Photo: © Ashden Awards.

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Studies Show Social Benefits

A detailed study of the health and social impacts of using the energy-efficient stoves and water-warming facilities was undertaken by the Aga Khan University Hospital during the winters of 2008 and 2009. The study revealed that carbon monoxide concentrations were reduced by 44% in homes that used the AKPBS,P products, while the small particulates (PM2.5 concentrations), the major pollutants that damage health were reduced by 70%.

This improved stove is cooking food, heating water (stored in the barrel in the background), and keeping the room warm.. Photo: © Ashden Awards

Women using the products noticed that there was less smoke in their homes, and that the house and cooking utensils stayed cleaner. They also found that food cooked in less time, and the house warmed up more quickly.

Other benefits were reported to the Ashden judge who visited households. Insulated floors were found to be much more comfortable to sit on, and being able to close up the roof vent greatly reduced heat loss and draughts. Having a supply of hot water ‘on tap’ was particularly appreciated. It saves time – for instance, not having to heat water first thing in the morning before prayers – and improves hygiene.

Greg Barker MP with Princess Zahra Aga Khan and Hafiz Sherali, Aga Khan Planning and Building Services, Pakistan. Photo: © Ashden Awards

The impact is huge, both professionally and personally. People, especially the women, have more time for earning money, notably with increased production of Shu, the local woollen cloth. And they are healthier and safer, with more time to learn and to relax. Their world has become larger. As one villager says: ‘Children have heard about things like trains and planes. Now they can see them on the television.”

By 2014, AKPBS wants to have secured carbon finance to help provide energy-efficient products to a further 17,000 households, and to have extended the programme to other countries in the Himalayas.

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Aga Khan Rural Support Programme, Pakistan: Winner of the 2004 Ashden Awards

Micro-hydro power for remote mountain villages

Remoteness from a regular supply of electricity has many costs. For the scattered and isolated villagers of the Hindu Kush mountains of Pakistan, those costs can be measured not only by low incomes, but by poor health and safety as pinewood sticks and costly kerosene lamps make a precarious substitute for the lack of electricity.

Rivers such as this are a powerful source for hydro-power in Northern Pakistan. This one is on Garam Chasma road. Photo: © Ashden Awards

But the villagers are not without power provided by environmental surroundings. Rivers are abundant in the area. Recognising this, the Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (AKRS, P) set about funding and building micro hydro power plants by involving the villagers from the outset. Local committees were set up to manage installation and maintenance, including pricing. Villagers were encouraged to participate in the work.

A micro hydro plant room in Garam Chasma. Photo: © Ashden Awards

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A stream leading to the micro-hydro plant at Darazguru, Bumboret. Photo: © Ashden Awards

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The top of the channel drop supplying the micro-hydro plant at Garam Chasma, in Pakistan’s Hindu Kush, a few miles from the Afghan border. (Photo credit: Martin Wright)

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A micro-hydro plant room. Photo: © Ashden Awards

These plants supplied electricity to about 175,000 people in the Chitral District and the North-West Frontier Province. Electric lighting has replaced expensive and polluting kerosene lamps and dirty pine resin torches. It has given children the invaluable chance to study during the evenings, while their parents can generate much-needed income through increased production of clothes and handicrafts.

A house in the village of Rumbur, Chitral, lit by electricity from a local micro-hydro plant. (Photo: Ashden Awards, credit: Martin Wright)

But there are health and safety benefits too, like being able to avoid deadly scorpion stings at night. In addition to providing better lighting the villagers have also begun to value the use of radio, television and appliances like electric butter churner. Their world has become larger. As one villager says: “Children have heard about things like trains and planes. Now they can see them on the television.”

A Nagar woman proudly holding an electric butter churner. Photo: © Ashden Awards

The progress to date has been impressive. By 2010, a total of 204 hydro systems had been installed in Chitral province and about 20 elsewhere, supplying electricity for lighting and household appliances.

Village at Darazguru, Bumboret, one of the beneficiaries of the project. Photo: © Ashden Awards

The plan is for larger plants to support cooking and heating, and two new programmes under development will reach a further 350 villages, funding permitting.

A computer centre in Karimabad, Hunza, powered by micro-hydro. Photo: © Ashden Awards

Date posted: Friday, September 7, 2012.

Photos: Copyright. Ashden Awards.

Text and captions: Compiled from Ashden Awards.

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To view an excellent video (appx. 6 minutes) of the work of AKPBS, please click http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzKznNA7lRY&feature=player_embedded or the image below:

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Other Ashden resources:

2011 Ashden Awards – AKPBS Case Study – PDF
Ashden Awards Winner 2011 – AKPBS

Scenes from America: Five Colossal Faces, a Beautiful Lake and a Needle’s Eye in the Black Hills of South Dakota

By Malik Merchant
Publisher-Editor, www.simerg.com

Crazy Horse Memorial is a tribute to the culture, tradition and living heritage of American Indians and the spirit of the legendary Lakota leader, Crazy Horse. Sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski began carving the world’s largest ongoing carving in 1948. Today his family and the Crazy Horse Foundation continue the dream and work on the sculpture that will stand 641 feet long and 563 feet high when completed. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com.

One of the better  investments I made during my recent 4,500 km road trip from Toronto to Vancouver, via the USA, was the purchase of the 2013 edition of Rand McNally’s Road Atlas (RMRA) at an Esso gas station just as I reached the U.S border in Sarnia, Ontario. This and a basic Garmin GPS system purchased a few hours earlier in Toronto became my best companions for the my eighteen-day trip. Who says state of the art and traditional guides won’t mix? The worthy RMRA helped me with my trip from Minneapolis onwards (still a few days away as my first stop would be in Chicago), while the GPS ensured I stayed on a correct course all the time, or each time I felt it had erred – sure enough it had not. A couple I encountered told me that they treated electronic gadgets such as the GPS with some apprehension after they had once been instructed to follow a path that reached a dead-end, with a brick-home staring at their faces. I am convinced, however, that technology more often than not,  has to be trusted and is your friend.

Beautiful Sylvan Lake holds the designation as Custer Sate Park’s crown jewel. The lake was created in 1881 with the building of a dam across Sunday Gulch. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com.

In my first post, I provided an overall sketch with a few photos of the first few days of my trip that included sightseeing in Chicago, Minneapolis, Mitchell, Rapid City and Badlands National Park. In Minneapolis, following a Minnesota Twins match-up against the Oakland A’s, I settled into my room and opened the invaluable atlas for the first time. My original plan from the Twin Cities was to head North-West to Glacier National Park, and cross into Canada to visit the sister Waterton National Park. Then, I would spend a few days in Calgary, before driving to Vancouver where my parents eagerly awaited me. Apparently, this 2013 edition of the Atlas, like the previous editions, had brief write-ups about America’s best voted small towns in different categories such as “most patriotic”, “most beautiful” and so on. The readers’ choices in the 2013 edition included Rapid City in South Dakota and Sandpoint in Idaho. I also noted that Badlands National Park was in South Dakota, and not too far off. I love National Parks and saw some good reviews of Badlands on Tripadvisor.

Spectacular needle like granite formations on the Needles Highway. The Highway began attracting public attention when it was completed in 1922. Like past years, visitors continue to drive the narrow roadway to revel at its natural beauty and admire its engineering feat. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

I decided to go with the recommendations in the Atlas, but first things first. I consulted with my aging parents. While my mum was worried that I would reach Vancouver later than my original arrival date, I could clearly hear my dad’s voice telling my mum, “Tell him not to rush, let him take his time and ask him not to worry,” although he was the one who was unwell. He had gathered what we were talking about. Should I trust dad? I was apprehensive and could sense some anxiety in my mum, but she acquiesced to my dad’s repeated “not to worry” call-outs! He ultimately came on the phone and had me moving along in the new direction. Consequently, I ended up visiting places that I had never imagined I would visit on this trip, or for a few years at least.

A view of the Mount Rushmore National Memorial from the Grand View Terrace following the Evening Lighting Ceremony. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

I have to salute the builders of the incredible towns and monuments as well as the founders, keepers, trustees, and supporters of USA’s magnificent State and National Parks System. Of course, my gratitude to Rand McNally for its special feature in the Atlas. The book is still intact and in great shape, thanks to the GPS that took care of the exits and the ramps by constantly guiding me, “Turn right on X Street, then take the ramp on the left….then drive 194 miles to Exit 34b.” Thank you! And thanks to the readers for their responses to my first post, especially after WordPress “Freshly Pressed” it. For newbies to my website, please read the first post (later!, after you have seen this one)  by clicking Scenes from America by Malik Merchant. I invite everyone to also see the links at the end of this piece describing my visit with my daughter to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks as well as Salt Lake City.

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SOUTH DAKOTA AND ITS BLACK HILLS

A panoramic view of the Black Hills from the Mount Rushmore Memorial. Among its many attractions, Black Hills offers visitors the Mount Rushmore and Crazy Horse Memorials, the Jewel Cave National Monument, the Custer State Park, Scenic Byways as well as historical towns such as Sturgis, Deadwood and Keystone. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

South Dakota is a State with a diverse landscape decorated with rolling plains and the majestic mountain range known as “The Black Hills”. The State is also home to around 62,000 Dakota, Lakota or Nakota Native Americans.  The name “Black Hills” is a translation of the Lakota Pahá Sápa. The hills were so-called because of their dark appearance from a distance, as they were covered in trees. Locals tend to divide the Black Hills into two areas: “The Southern Hills” and “The Northern Hills”. My focus is going to be on three major attractions in “The Southern Hills” which I visited in the following order – the Crazy Horse Memorial and Needles Highway on my first full-day at a nice town called Keystone, and the Rushmore National Memorial on my second full day. In fact Keystone’s proximity to Rushmore has given it the honourable title  “The Home of Mount Rushmore.”

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CRAZY HORSE MEMORIAL – A TRIBUTE TO THE NATIVE AMERICANS

“My lands are where my dead lie buried,” replied Crazy Horse when asked, “Where are your lands now?”

The Sculptor’s Vision

Korczak Ziolkowski’s famous Crazy Horse 1/34th scale model sits majestically on the viewing veranda. In the model, the left hand of Crazy Horse is thrown out pointing in answer to the derisive question asked by a white man, “Where are your lands now?” Crazy Horse replied, “My lands are where my dead lie buried.” The final carving when completed is to be carved not so much as a lineal likeness but more as a memorial to the spirit of Crazy Horse to his people. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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A Work in Progress

A panoramic view of the 563-foot-tall granite sculpture of the iconic Native American leader, Crazy Horse, who defeated Custer at Little Bighorn in 1876. The scale of this work in the Black Hills of South Dakota is mind-boggling. Still in the making, when finished, the sculpture will be the world’s largest mountain carving – dwarfing such monuments as the Great Pyramid of Giza and the Statue of Liberty. In fact, all four of Rushmore’s presidents will fit inside Crazy Horse’s 87.5-foot-tall head. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

The finished work will depict Crazy Horse astride his horse, pointing to his sacred Black Hills. The sculpture will be 563 feet high and 641 feet long. It will be taller than the Washington Monument and almost twice the size of the Statue of Liberty. It’s so big that all four presidents from Mount Rushmore – see photos below – could fit inside Crazy Horse’s head. The project began on June 3, 1948. Sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski worked mostly on the face before his death in 1982 at age 74. Family members completed the face. There is no estimate of when the sculpture will be done. Ziolkowski initially thought he could do it in 30 years. Even as a work in  progress, the more than one million visitors to Crazy Horse is a testimony to the growing interest in Native American themes. Crazy Horse has already become a must-see counterpart to Mount  Rushmore National Memorial, fifteen miles away.

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The Completed Face of Crazy Horse

Crazy Horse was born in South Dakota’s Black Hills in 1842. While at Fort Robinson, Nebraska, under a flag of truce, he was stabbed in the back by an American soldier and died September 6, 1877 at the age of 35. Crazy Horse Memorial in the Black Hills is one of South Dakota’s most notable destinations. Lakota leaders invited Korczak Ziolkowski, a New York sculptor, to create the Memorial in the heart of an area considered sacred by many tribes. The elders chose the symbolic representation of famed Little Bighorn leader Crazy Horse to honour all North American Indian people and proclaim “the red man has heroes also.” The 90 foot tall face of Crazy Horse was unveiled in 1998. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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The Museum, Veranda, Cultural Centre and Sculptor’s Log Home at Crazy Horse Memorial

“Prayer to the Great Spirit”

Oh Great Spirit, giver of all life;
You have been always, and before you nothing has been.
Look and smile upon us your children, so that we may live this day to serve you.
Watch over my relatives, the red, black, white and brown.
Sweeten my heart and fill me with light this day.
Give me strength to understand and the eyes to see.
Help me great spirit, for without you, I am nothing.” ….Paul War cloud [1]

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A panel display in one of the 3-wings of the Indian Museum of North America, part of the larger complex of buildings at the Crazy Horse Memorial. Some of the panels show historical letters pertaining to Crazy Horse, one of them describing how the Native Indian leader met his ultimate fate at the hands of an American soldier at age 35. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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Historical pieces at the excellent Native American Cultural Centre at the Crazy Horse Memorial Centre. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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The Native American Cultural Center is part of a suite of buildings at the Crazy Horse Welcome Centre. It is on two levels and is visited by artisans from many tribes to exhibit their works. The centre also show cases historical artifacts. Other facilities at the impressive welcome centre include gift shops, theatres, an orientation center, the Laughing Water Restaurant which features excellent Native Indian meals, and the Sculptor’s log studio-home. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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Portraits of the late sculptor, Korczak Ziolkowski, and his surviving wife Ruth at the sculptor’s log studio-home which is furnished with many antiques and fine works of art. Even though the original sculptor, Korczak Ziolkowski, died in 1982, the work to complete Crazy Horse as envisioned by the sculptor continues even through present day. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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A view of Crazy Horse from the veranda of the Crazy Horse Memorial complex. The carving is still in progress, and one can watch the drillers and bulldozers at work, as well as experience the rumble of explosives shaping the world’s largest emerging mountain sculpture. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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For a nominal fee bus tours will take tourists to the base of the Crazy Horse Sculpture. Here I am pictured with a guide who is truly passionate about the Memorial. His knowledge about the Black Hills and accounts about the Native Indians made my 30 minute trip a truly enjoyable one. Crazy Horse Memorial is a tribute to the culture, tradition and living heritage of American Indians and the spirit of the legendary Lakota leader, Crazy Horse. Sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski began carving the world’s largest ongoing carving in 1948. Today his family and the Crazy Horse Foundation continue the dream and work on the sculpture that will stand 641 feet long and 563 feet high when completed. Photo: Malik Merchant collection. © Simerg.com

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NEEDLES HIGHWAY – A SCENIC WONDER WITH A BEAUTIFUL LAKE AND MAGNIFICENT GRANITE FORMATIONS

From Crazy Horse Memorial, to return to the town of Keystone, I took the Needles Highway, part of the Peter Norbeck Scenic Byway in the Black Hills National Forest of Custer State Park. The 14 mile drive on the highway, named after the needle-like granite formations which seem to pierce the horizon along the highway, took me first to the scenic Sylvan Lake before I was challenged with hairpin turns and narrow tunnels. Of course I followed Norbeck’s admonition, “You are not supposed to drive here at sixty miles an hour. To do the scenery half-justice, people should drive twenty and under.”

A maze of spectacular granite formations, reminiscent of needles and cathedral spires, was the highlight of this fascinating drive through a forest also cloaked in ponderosa pine, birch, bur oak, Black Hills spruce and several willows. The Needles Highway began attracting public attention when it was completed in 1922. Like past years, visitors continue to drive the narrow roadway to revel at its natural beauty and admire its engineering feat.

The Needles and Cathedral Spires in Custer State Park offer some of the best climbing routes in the country. Rock climbers travel from around the world to challenge the nearby formations.

A stunning view of the Sylvan Lake, which holds the designation as Custer Sate Park’s Crown Jewel. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com.

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One of the several trails around Sylvan Lake. The trail is worth taking because it offers close-ups of the rock formations in the lake. The lake was created in 1881 with the building of a dam across Sunday Gulch. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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The Needles Highway gets its name from the needle-like granite formations which seem to pierce the horizon along the highway. The rock was formed underground from magma (liquid rock). The rock then pushed upward over millions of years, cooling very slowly. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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A unique rock formation called the Needle’s Eye, so named for the needle like opening created by wind, rain, freezing and thawing. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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A youth proudly takes a picture of his mum’s car as she successfully negotiates the narrow tunnel adjacent to Needle’s Eye, pictured above. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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A cute and intelligent chipmunk on a rock near the Needles Granite Formations. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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The Needle Spires, shown above, and the Cathedral Spires, below, in Custer State Park offer some of the best climbing routes in the country. Rock climbers travel from around the world to challenge the nearby formations.

The Cathedral Spires, perhaps the most famous rock formation in the Black Hills, derives its name comes from the towering peaks which appear like organ pipes from the Needles Highway. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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THE FOUR FACES AT MOUNT RUSHMORE NATIONAL MEMORIAL

The Rushmore National Memorial, one of America’s most enduring patriotic symbols, is a massive carving of the colossal faces of US Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Rossevelt and Abraham Lincoln representing the first 150 years of American history. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

“A lot of Indian people look at Mount Rushmore as a symbol of what white people did to this country when they arrived — took the land from the Indians and desecrated it…I’m not going to concentrate on that. But there is a huge need for Anglo-Americans to understand the Black Hills before the arrival of the white men. We need to talk about the first 150 years of America and what that means.”  — Gerad Baker

This quote by Mount Rushmore’s first American Indian superintendent, appears in Smithsonian Magazine’s piece on Mt. Rushmore. The article also notes that Baker began to expand programs and lectures at the monument to include the Indian perspective. Until then, visitors learned about Rushmore as a patriotic symbol, as a work of art or as a geological formation, but nothing about its pre-white history — or why it raises such bitterness among many Native Americans.  [2]

The chronology of Mount Rushmore Memorial in South Dakota. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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Over 450,000 tons of rock were removed from Mount Rushmore. Dynamite was used to remove 90% of it, but jack hammers and facing bits were used for the rest. The photo shows the largest of the three air compressors which was used to provide power to operate the jack hammers. This equipment is on display at the Mount Rushmore Memorial. An 1,800 foot, 3-inch pipeline followed the stairway up the mountain to carry the air for the jack hammers. During the winter months, a liquid gas was injected in the pipeline to prevent freezing. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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“On many occasions, when a new project is presented to you on paper and then, later on, when you see the accomplishment, you are disappointed, but it is just the opposite of that in what we are looking at now. I had seen the photographs. I had seen the drawings and I had talked to those who are responsible for this great work, and yet I had no conception until about ten minutes ago not  only of its magnitude but of its permanent beauty and its permanent importance.” –  President Franklin Roosevelt upon first seeing Mount Rushmore, August 30, 1936.

The Mount Rushmore Memorial from the Avenue of Flags. Fifty six flags of the states, districts, commonwealths and territories of the US adorn either side of the main avenue. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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A sculpture of Gutzon Borglum by his son Lincoln. It was left upto Lincoln to finish the project in October 1941, just few months after his father’s death in March of the same year. Borglum began to sculpt the Mount Rushmore in 1927 which took 14 years and $1 million to complete. For millions of Americans, the iconic sculpture of four famous American Presidents holds meaning and stirs emotions like no other tourism spot. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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A plaque commemorating the workers who with workers created the historic masterpiece of the faces of four American Presidents between October 4, 1927, and October 31, 1941. Today Mount Rushmore hosts more than three million visitors each year from across the USA and around the world. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com.

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The colossal face of George Washington as photographed from the Presidential Trail. The 1/2 mile trail begins on the Grand View Terrace, takes you to the base of the mountain, past the Sculptor’s Studio and back. George Washington (1732 – 1799), America’s first President is considered the father of the country and is therefore the most prominent figure on the mountain. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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An exceptional educational panel display of the four presidents and 150 years of American history. The four presidents – Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Lincoln – sculpted on Mount Rushmore respectively represent the birth, growth, development and preservation of the country. George Washington (1732 – 1799), America’s first President is considered the father of the country and is therefore the most prominent figure on the mountain. Thomas Jefferson (1743 – 1836) was the author of the Declaration of Independence and America’s third president. Theodore Roosevelt (1858 – 1919) led the country into the 20th century and Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) is considered by many to be America’s greatest president. He held the nation together during the Civil War. Photo: Malik Merchant. © Simerg.com

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Date posted: September 4, 2012.

Copyright: Simerg.com

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References:

[1] Quote of Paul War cloud (1930 – 1973) posted in the Indian Museum at the Crazy Horse Memorial.

[2] Read complete article in the May 2006 issue of Smithsonian Magazine, available on-line at Mt. Rushmore by Tony Perrottet.

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Also read my previous posts:

Scenes from America by Malik Merchant
Our Incredible ‘Yellowstone’ Holiday – Part I: Salt Lake City by Nurin and Malik Merchant
Our Incredible ‘Yellowstone’ Holiday: Part II – Wild Life Safari at Grand Teton National Park
Our Incredible ‘Yellowstone’ Holiday: Part III – The Yellowstone Caldera and Geysers of the Old Faithful Basin

For a complete list as well as links to all the articles posted on this blog since March 2009, please click WHAT’S NEW.

A Story from ‘Pyara Imam ni Pyari Wato’: Historical Memories by Sairab Abuturabi and Jaferali Bhalwani

Loving Tales of our Beloved Imams: (I) Farazdaq’s Praise and Support of Imam Zainul Abideen (a.s.)

“…This tale belongs to ages past. It goes back to the era of Hazrat Imam Zainul Abideen (a.s.), our third Imam, from whose veins was to ensue the Divine Line of the Imams. He was the Imam who, on the battlefield of Karbala, received the nass of Imamat from his father, Hazrat Imam Hussain (a.s.) with the blessing: “Through you the line of Imamat will continue till the Day of Judgment…”

Please click for story