JUST OUTSIDE GREENFIELD, Iowa, May 24, 2008

Fashioning A Memorial Of Art And Stone

A Painted Rock In Rural Iowa Becomes A Touchstone For Remembering Veterans And War Dead

    • Ray

      Ray "Bubba" Sorensen works on this year's Freedom Rock.  (Ray and Maria Sorensen)

    • Each year the rock in rural Iowa is painted over with a new mural honoring those who fought in America's wars, especially those who died serving their country.

      Each year the rock in rural Iowa is painted over with a new mural honoring those who fought in America's wars, especially those who died serving their country.  (Courtesy Ray and Maria Sorensen)

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(CBS)  On an empty stretch of highway in Iowa, a 12-foot-tall, 56-ton rock gets a fresh paint job every Memorial Day.

It's the "Freedom Rock," and for each of the past ten years, its creator has dedicated a month of his life to covering it with tributes to veterans - a living monument to the troops.

Ray "Bubba" Sorensen was only 19 years old when he first saw the movie "Saving Private Ryan," and decided that patriotism was at an all-time low.

"People think Memorial Day is just a three-day weekend," said Sorensen. "I decided to go out there and paint the rock to say 'thank you' to the soldiers for their freedom and flag-raising."

Three years ago, a group of veterans on their way to the Vietnam Wall Memorial dropped by the site in Adair County and asked to sprinkle ashes there.

Sorensen offered to incorporate them into the paint so that they wouldn't blow away. Everything happened so quickly that he never even got the names of the eight veterans whose ashes now reside underneath his 2005 painting of a helicopter.

What began as a spur-of-the-moment decision has come to define it. Just the other day, Sorensen received a call to paint the ashes of an eleventh veteran onto the rock. It will happen at the ten-year celebration of the "Freedom Rock," which will take place this Sunday.

This year's mural features a soldier from every major conflict in U.S. history. On the backside, he has painted the faces of the four soldiers who received the Medal of Honor for their service in Iraq and Afghanistan. There's also a tribute to disabled veterans.

Cars and trucks used to whiz by without a passing glance to this graffiti site, just 15 feet away from Interstate 25. Now, many take the time to stop. Word of mouth and a well-circulated e-mail written by a stranger five years ago have drawn thousands from all 50 states to the roadside landmark.

Visitors sometimes hover silently nearby as Sorensen paints. Other visitors have been moved to tears.

Sorensen vividly recalls a hot, sweaty day during which he had become agitated with visitors constantly interrupting his work. Then a mother put her hand on his shoulder.

"She told me, 'My son is a soldier. We just lost him in Iraq.'" She and her husband had driven from Illinois after the funeral to see the rock. Sorensen said her words made him "step back and remember why I was doing all this.

"I think in the instance when someone has lost a loved one, they want to know, 'Please God this wasn't for nothing. This wasn't an unappreciated sacrifice,'" said Sorensen.

"I think they see through me that it wasn't for nothing ... These veterans give so much. They lay their life on the line. They feel like they deserve a monument. This lets them know in Middle America, we're thinking about them."

Perhaps the most memorable image Sorensen has ever painted on the rock was that of Lance Corporal Clinton "CJ" Miller, who was killed in action in December 2006. Miller was a good friend who came from the same small town of 2,000 people.

A few years ago, Sorensen considered ceasing his work. Painting the rock costs money and it becomes a second full-time job for one month a year, without pay. But then a huge surge of community support changed his mind.

The rock has been vandalized twice since Sorensen began painting it, but he doesn't think the odds are high that it will happen again soon.

"In May 2001, I painted a tribute to the 60th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor," recalls Sorensen. "This kid put up all this anti-American graffiti on it. One of the local Vietnam Veterans tracked down who did it, and beat the crap out of him."


Visit www.bubbazartwork.com for information on the artist and Freedom Rock.

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Add a Comment
by ajgerdes May 25, 2008 9:49 PM EDT
I live about an hour away from where this is at. I have been there a few times. I think that everybody in the area should make a visit there. Its something you wont forget.
Reply to this comment
by blackwater66-2009 May 24, 2008 11:17 PM EDT
My heartfelt condolence goes out to the families of my fallen brothers in arms who have paid the supreme price for your freedom. May your sacrifices not go unrewarded. God Bless you all and thanks.....

DE OPPRESSO LIBRE
5TH SFG
Reply to this comment
by dakotaclark May 24, 2008 11:16 PM EDT
As a veteran, I want to say "THANK YOU!" to the artist, Ray "Bubba" Sorensen.
Reply to this comment
by sinibaldi1 May 24, 2008 7:36 PM EDT
The long vigils of the night.

Near an alley,
and where magical
violins look like
a melody of
an ancient good
sense, you hear
the first light
of a springtime and
always, in all its
meanings, the luminous
wisdom forgets a
white candle.

Francesco Sinibaldi
Reply to this comment
by boyntonbe May 24, 2008 4:36 PM EDT
ofbyfor1

Ditto. And thanks. Well said.
Reply to this comment
by j-whitman May 24, 2008 4:35 PM EDT
I wonder where McBush is hiding this Memorial Day after dishonoring their service by opposing their benifits.
Reply to this comment
by ofbyfor1 May 24, 2008 4:03 PM EDT
We''re thinking about them here in New England too. I don''t feel that we should have ever invaded Iraq to begin with (Afghanistan, yes), but these young men and women are my fellow country(wo)men. I respect their service and hope that they can come home safely and soon.
Reply to this comment

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