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Home » How Public Memorials Help Us Heal: Olivia Rothstein Keeffe (Transcript)

How Public Memorials Help Us Heal: Olivia Rothstein Keeffe (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Olivia Rothstein Keeffe’s talk titled “How Public Memorials Help Us Heal” at TEDxUGA 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Power of Five Seconds

For five seconds, I want all of you to sit still and absorb your surroundings. Try and trust your instincts to tell you when the five seconds have passed. All right, ready? Go.

Now, for each of us, those five seconds felt a little bit different and probably not very significant. But if you were to bring all of us together to talk about what happened during those five seconds, we would form a collective memory. What if we could freeze those five seconds? What if we could take them and turn them into something physical?

That is what memorials can do. They take our collective memories and give them form, freezing a moment in time and providing us a sense of permanence. It’s a daunting task, is it not, to design and build a symbol of hundreds, thousands, or even millions of people’s memories?

The Journey to Understanding Memorials

I started connecting with memorials on a deeper level after an undergraduate Holocaust studies class and a visit to the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Germany. It was there I decided to pursue a Master of Landscape Architecture, so I could not only better understand existing memorials but learn to design new ones.

Currently, we use memorials to tangibly and physically honor those we’ve lost. They are physical representations of how we, as communities, address grief. Architectural historian Del Upton asserts that monuments always say more about the people, times, and places of their creation than they do about the people, times, and places they honor.

So when we create a monument or a memorial, we are not just creating it for the people before us, but for everyone in the future, too.