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.