NEW YORK – President
Barack #Obama and Sept. 11 survivors, rescuers and victims' relatives
are expected to mark the opening of the #9/11 museum, where the story of
the terrorist attacks is told on a scale as big as the twin towers'
columns and as intimate as victims' last voicemails.
The National September 11 Memorial Museum is set to be dedicated Thursday before opening to the general public May 21.
By
turns chilling and heartbreaking, the ground zero museum leads people
on an unsettling journey through the terrorist attacks, with forays into
their lead up and legacy.
There
are scenes of horror, including videos of the skyscrapers collapsing
and people falling from them. But there also are symbols of heroism,
ranging from damaged fire trucks to the wristwatch of one of the airline
passengers who confronted the hijackers.
"You
won't walk out of this museum without a feeling that you understand
humanity in a deeper way," museum President Joe Daniels said Wednesday.
The
museum and memorial plaza above, which opened in 2011, were built for
$700 million in donations and tax dollars. Work on the museum was marked
by construction problems, financial squabbles and disputes over its
content and the appropriate way to honor the dead, but its leaders see
it as a monument to unity and resilience.
And its opening is prompting reflection from presidents and the everyday people whose lives were changed by the attacks.
Obama
is mindful of "the need to remember and the power of memory in a
nation's history, as well as the need to properly grieve and rebuild,"
White House spokesman Jay Carney said Wednesday. Former President George
W. Bush issued a statement saying the museum "will help ensure that our
nation remembers the lessons of Sept. 11."
Charles G. Wolf, who lost his wife, Katherine, awaited Thursday's ceremonial opening with a mix of anticipation and dread.
"It brings everything up," he said Wednesday.
Visitors
start in an airy pavilion where the rusted tops of two of the World
Trade Center's trident-shaped columns shoot upward. From there,
museumgoers descend stairs and ramps, passing through a dark corridor
filled with the voices of people remembering the day and past the
battered "survivors' staircase" that hundreds used to escape the burning
towers.
At
the base level — 70 feet below ground, amid remnants of the
skyscrapers' foundations — there are such artifacts as a mangled piece
of the antenna from atop the trade center and a fire truck with its cab
shorn off.
Then,
galleries plunge visitors into the chaos of Sept. 11: fragments of
planes, a set of keys to the trade center, a teddy bear left at the
impromptu memorials that arose after the attacks, the dust-covered shoes
of those who fled the skyscrapers' collapse, emergency radio
transmissions and office workers calling loved ones, even a recording of
an astronaut solemnly describing the smoke plume from the International
Space Station. Sprinkled in are snippets about the 19 hijackers, including photos of them on an inconspicuous panel.
Source: Fox News
Source: Fox News
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