At 36 metres tall, it will tower imperiously over this town in
western Poland. But the giant statue of Jesus under construction has
divided Polish Catholics and led to charges of megalomania against the
Catholic Church.
The structure is being built on a 16-metre-high hill in
Swiebodzin. Locals claim it will be taller - just - than the 80-year-old
Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, now the world's tallest statue
of Jesus.
The main body of the Polish Jesus is 33 metres high - a
metre for each year he lived - and is topped with a three-metre metal
crown of thorns.
The project has split Polish society: some are expressing
pride, others derision, while many practising Catholics are calling for
it to be abandoned.
The chief building inspector has received threats,
including a brick through his car window.
Supporters of the project, which is being led by local
priest Sylwester Zawadzki, hope the statue will attract pilgrims from
across the country, turning the economically downtrodden town into a
''second Czestochowa'', a reference to Poland's most popular pilgrimage
site, home of the Black Madonna shrine.
The 400-tonne statue has been five years in the making.
Originally, Father Zawadzki wanted a ''small garden sculpture'', but
over time his ambitions have grown.
The latest worries are about safety after a crane
collapsed when builders tried to position the head, crushing a builder's
foot. Sceptics said it was a sign of God's disapproval. When the priest
suffered a heart attack, the same claim was made.
Building experts have voiced concerns the foundations are
not deep enough.
''We'll give it 20 years, maximum, then it'll fall
apart,'' one building expert told Polish media.
SIC: SMH/AUS