The Crazy Horse Monument is very important for the United States not only to inherit the culture of Native American, to share beliefs and to boost domestic pride, but also to support their community. When it is needed most, the Crazy Horse Memorial is an attractive monument as well as an indispensable NDN (mother tongue for "India") institution. Crazy Horse Monument is personally funded by donations and income provided by memorial shops through gifts and museums in the past 64 years.
Crazy Horse Memorial near Custer is the world's largest mountain sculpture. The monument is a way to respect North American Indian culture and tradition. Visitors to the Crazy Horse Memorial can see the progress of the mountain sculptures and visit the Native American Museum and Art Center on the Memorial Campus. Located in the Southwest of South Dakota State, Badlands National Park has 244,000 acres of sharply eroded hills and jagged peaks that form a moon-like surface. Thousands of prehistoric fossils were found in the park. Excavation investigation of archeology and paleontology is continued today.
Crazy Horse is now commemorating the Crazy Horse Memorial in Black Mountain, South Dakota. Sculpture was started in 1948 by Ziółkowski. When completed, it will be 641 feet wide and 563 feet tall. Aboriginal activists in the United States, especially Russell, criticized the project as abusing the memory of Lakota culture and Crazy Horse.
Crazy hose is celebrated by Crazy Horse Memorial. This large mountain sculpture is in Black Mountain National Forest, about 10 miles southwest of SD City. Construction of the Crazy Horse Memorial Hall began in 1948. Elder Eldest Lakota, Henry Standing Bear, asked a sculptor named Korczak Ziolkowski to make sculptures commemorating the appearance of a Native American hero. Rushmore commemorates the white American hero. The memorial hall is still under way and there is no clear end date. But once it is completely funded and finished through personal donation it will be the largest sculpture in the world.
Crazy Horse is celebrated by an incomplete crazy hose monument near the town of Bern, near South Dakota Black Mountain. It is a monument carved on the hillside like the nearby Mount Rushmore National Memorial. The sculpture began with a Polish American sculptor Korczak Ziółkowski who worked at Gutzon Borglum in Mount Rushmore in 1948. The monument necessary to complete is 641 feet (195 meters) wide and 563 feet (172 meters) high. After receiving a letter from the local Lakota Chief Henry Standing Bear, Ziółkowski was urged to create a Crazy Horse Monument. Native Americans believe that Thunderhead Mountain, a sculptural monument, is a sacred place. Thunderhead Mountain is located between Custer and Hill City