Cristo Rei of Dili


Cristo Rei of Dili is a statue of Jesus located atop a globe in Dili, East Timor. The statue was designed by Mochamad Syailillah, who is better known as Bolil. The statue was officially unveiled by Suharto in 1996 as gift from the Indonesian government to the people of Timor Timur, the then Indonesian province. The statue is one of the main tourist attractions in East Timor.
The statue, and the globe on which it rests, are situated at the end of the Fatucama peninsula, facing out to the ocean and can be reached by climbing some 597 steps.

History

The idea of raising the Cristo Rei statue was proposed by the East Timor governor José Abílio Osório Soares to President Suharto. It was intended as a present for the 20th anniversary of East Timor's integration into Indonesia.
Suharto appointed the director of national airline Garuda Indonesia to lead the project. Garuda was given the responsibility to find capital for funding the project, and raised 1.1 billion rupiah. However, that was not sufficient to erect the statue, and contributions from East Timorese civil servants and businessmen were needed to complete the project, which eventually cost more than 5 billion rupiah.
It took almost a year of working to create the body of the statue, which was fabricated by 30 workers in Sukaraja, Bandung.
It was made of 27 separate copper sections, which were then loaded onto three trailers and shipped to Dili. Reconstruction of the statue, including the globe and a 10-meter-high cross, took three months.
It was unveiled on 15 October 1996. Roman Catholic bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, together with President Suharto and East Timor Governor José Abílio Osório Soares, directly witnessed the revelation of this statue from the air using a helicopter.

Symbolism

The monument is 27 meters high, a reference to the integration of East Timor as the 27th province of Indonesia. The statue and globe are 17 meters high, an allusion to Indonesian Independence Day.
The statue is oriented towards the west, which some believed as the direction of Jakarta.

Gallery