posted on Mar, 2 2008 @ 12:18 PM
THE STATUE OF LIBERTY
There are some who believe that the history of the Statue of Liberty is incomplete and has been distorted, because it was originally conceived as a
Black woman. The sculptor of the Statue was a French-born Italian named Auguste Bartholdi. At the age of twenty-nine he visited Egypt and the sublime
sculptural legacy of the Black Egyptians left an indelible mark on him.
According to Graham Hancock and Robert Bauval, authors of Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith, it was during his visit to Egypt that Bartholdi met
Ferdinand de Lesseps who was then planning to construct the Suez Canal to link the Mediterranean Sea with the Red Sea. Impressed, Bartholdi thought of
making “a gigantic statue of a goddess holding a torch.” This statue was to overlook the canal. However, his plans failed to materialize.
Graham Hancock and Robert Duval have pointed out that “The idea of a similar monument to commemorate the friendship between France and the United
States for the 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence was first discussed by Bartholdi and others at the home, near Paris, of Edouard de
Laboulaye, an authority on North American culture. It seems that Bartholdi simply ‘converted’ his original project for Egypt and proposed it
instead as a ‘Statue of Liberty enlightening the world’ for New York. To this end the so-called Franco-American Union was established in 1875 to
raise the necessary funds.” (4)
The French engineer Alexandre Gustav Eiffel undertook the construction, although Bartholdi was the designer. The authors cite the Readers Companion to
American History, which claims that Bartholdi “ ‘ Combined elements of the Egyptian Pyramids he admired with his mother’s face to serve as a
model for the statue, which he finished early in 1884.’ ”
In his work Statue of Liberty: First Hundred Years, Bernard Weisberger claims that the giant statue was to be that of the Egyptian goddess Isis. It
is a fact that Isis was Black, as was her husband, Osiris. This raises the interesting question: “Was the Statue of Liberty originally conceived to
portray a Black woman as some Black historians like Leonard Jeffries (5) have asserted? Indeed, the Cult of Isis was quite strong in France.
It has been said that, “The people of France gave the statue to the people of the United States over 100 years ago in recognition of the friendship
established during the American Revolution.”
The Statue was the brainchild of the French historian and politician, Edouard de Laboulaye, who was also the Chairman of the French Anti-Slavery
Society. The idea was to sculpt a monument in honor of Black soldiers who were instrumental in the defeat of the Confederacy during the Civil War and
thereby ensuring the end of slavery. They mooted the idea to the French Government of presenting a statue to the United States on behalf of the French
people through the American Abolitionist Society.
Bartholdi used a Black woman as the model for the original statue, Isis, no doubt. The original model is said to be in France and is black. The
American Committee of the Statue of Liberty did not approve of the idea, however, as the issue of slavery was still in favor by the Southern States
despite their defeat in the Civil War. When he was first presented with the statue, the U.S. Minister to France claimed that the South might object to
the broken shackles.
Bartholdi completed the statue depicting a Black woman with a broken chain of slavery in her left hand and at her feet in 1870. The 151-foot statue
was set up in New York Harbor in 1886. A 21-inch model can be found at the Museum of the City of New York at Fifth Avenue and 103rd Street. It was
displayed at the Museum on February 9, 2000. The N.Y. Post also displayed the original dark face of the Statue of Liberty on June 17, 1986.
Ultimately, the face of the Statue of Liberty was modeled after Bartholdi’s mother, Charlotte Beysser. The 151-foot statue was set up in New York
Harbor in 1886.
According to Michael Bradley, “The French Cultural Center (5th Avenue and 82nd Street) has a special “Liberty” edition of the magazine France in
which the real story is told and some of the models are illustrated. The original concept was not acceptable, even as a gift from France, and the idea
was finally modified into a properly Caucasian personification of “Liberty” before the U.S. would accept delivery.” (6)
Source: www.amazingafricanbooks.com