A very beautiful monument, which contains the tragic essence.
The massive bronze monument, weighing almost two and a half tons and more than three meters high, stands as the eternal guardian of tragic history. Its outlines, cast by skilled craftsmen at the Minsk art and sculpture combine, refer to the appearance of the exiled sons of Abkhazia.
The Mahajirs are descendants of the Abkhazians, whose lives were ruthlessly torn from their native land by the hurricane of the Russian-Caucasian War of the XIX century and countless other conflicts that plagued the region. This sculpture is not just a monument, but also an elegy for their lost home, a hymn to their indomitable spirit in the face of adversity.
The monument is very interesting. It's tragic. It hurts to look at him. There is a version that the plot of the monument is taken from the legend of love about a horse with withered legs. For me, it's a falling horse and its rider, drowning in a pool of their own blood. Dying together from the thought of separation from their native land.
A beautiful place, like everything in Abkhazia, slightly shabby, with its charisma, it's nice to take a walk, see the communist architecture: theaters, parks, sculptures, beach (city center, no people)
It does not make any vivid impression, the park was not very tidy after the bad weather, a small pond where there is a sculpture (bamboo grows along the shore) it was littered.
The sculpture is beautiful and original. But to understand the artist's idea, why don't the horse have legs? What does it mean. We should try to search the Internet.
A very strong monument. When you stand near this monument, you feel some kind of energy. And the smell of eucalyptus. It is necessary to see this monument to all visitors.
The bronze sculpture weighing about 3 tons is a muhajir on a horse, drowning in the sea, but not giving up.
The sculpture conveys the tension of the historical drama of muhajirism – the loss of the homeland, the deaths of thousands of people in the Black Sea, the difficulties of return and adaptation. The rider's hand is raised up and clenched into a fist – this gesture symbolizes rebirth.
A horse with its legs cut off, falling along with its rider. An original monument to the tragic events of the genocide of the Muslim part of Abkhazia. It is located right on the embankment, where you can sit down nearby and relax on a bench in the shade of trees, admiring the sea.
Definitely 10 out of 10
A very beautiful coastal area, eucalyptus alleys provide incredible air in this area
I advise you to take a walk there and enjoy the beauty of the area