Poland’s World War II Museum Opens Amid an Uncertain Future

(AP/Hamodia) —
WWII, World War II, World War II museum, Poland, Gdansk
The new Museum of the Second World War, almost completed, in Gdansk, Poland, in Jan., 2017. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

A major World War II museum opened in northern Poland on Thursday.

The Museum of the Second World War in Gdansk is at the center of a standoff between the historians creating it and Poland’s conservative government, which is seeking a court order to have it closed temporarily in order to reshape its focus.

The museum was initiated in 2008 by then-Prime Minister Donald Tusk. But the current Law and Justice government, wants to merge it with another museum and make it highlight Poland’s military effort in fighting the German Nazis and the nation’s own tragedy that, they believe, is not well enough known in the world.

The dispute between the museum and the government is to be decided by a court in the coming weeks.

Meanwhile, the government has cut the museum’s annual subsidy from the requested 20 million zlotys ($5 million) to 11.5 million zlotys ($2.9 million), director Pawel Machcewicz said.

Speaking at the opening ceremony, he said the huge exhibition places Poland’s war experience at the center of Europe’s and the world’s war history. It says out of some 5.5 million Poles killed in the war, over 5 million were civilians.

He invited Culture Minister Piotr Glinski to visit the museum, saying, “Let’s hope he will see for himself that it shows Poland’s history in the right way, that it fully explains Poland’s history to foreigners.”

War veterans, relatives of the fighters and schoolchildren were the museum’s first visitors.

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