Statue of a Boy from Pest

The statue of a Boy from Pest (Hungarian: A Pesti srác szobra; Polish: Pomnik Chłopca z Pesztu), also known as the Hungarian Boy Monument (Polish: Pomnik Chłopca Węgierskiego), is a name of two identical bronze statues by Richárd Juha, located in Budapest, Hungary, and Szczecin, Poland.

They were unveiled in 2016, to commemorate the aid of Szczecin inhabitants to Budapest population during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.

They were proposed by Szilárd Németh, a member of the National Assembly of Hungary, as a acknowledgment of the aid of Szczecin inhabitants to Budapest population during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.

They are bronze statues depicting a boy wearing a suit and a cap hat, with a rifle worn on his back.

[3] A statue in Budapest, Hungary is located in the district of Csepel, at the Saint Emeric Square, while a statue in Szczecin, Poland, in the Jan Kasprowicz Park, near Piotra Skargi Street.