In life, there are people, ideas, and moments that determine the future. Items like this shape how the world is perceived and determines what happens in the future. To honor them, people build monuments and memorials for them. With consideration of an event or person's significance, design, culture, and the economic effects that building a remembrance for one creates a place for people to recognize and remember important moments in history in order for people to learn, progress, and change in their ways. When deciding how to build a monument, the first question usually asked is “why”? Why is this monument, person, or event important? Why should it be remembered? Why is it significant? One reason is that monuments allow for people to feel …show more content…
The Holocaust Museum in the Washington D.C. Mall is dedicated in memory of those who had died in concentration camps, but the memorial was very controversial at the time. Designers of it were afraid that it would “overcome the Mall and take away the main purpose of the museum” (doc E). While America was trying to memorialize those who had suffered in the Holocaust, was it appropriate to have such a building? America had “refused to lift a finger to halt the Holocaust or open our shores to the few survivors” (doc E). This raises the question, if part of the reason for this memorial is for …show more content…
Would the benefit economically and socially cover the cost of the monument itself? At Savannah Memorial Park, thousands of corpses might be moved for “a future development” (doc D). This is because the residents in the area were not able to afford to maintain the cemetery. The movement of the skeletons and notifications for every relative would “cost millions of dollars” (doc D), another cost that they are unable to afford. However, the burial site is “rich in history” (doc D) as some graves date back to 1847 along with having also been a burial ground for Native Americans. The cost of the memorial cannot pay for the upkeep of the grounds - however that does not lessen the significance of the site. A “future development” (doc D) would later replace the cemetery when the graves are moved. There will always be income from a memorial as people will travel to a place because of the place’s aura. However, sometimes it is not enough of a revenue to uphold the quality of the site. The importance behind something must also be balanced with the cost of the monument when deciding what to