Current:Home > FinanceGrim yet hopeful addition to National WWII Museum addresses the conflict’s world-shaping legacy -WealthPro Academy
Grim yet hopeful addition to National WWII Museum addresses the conflict’s world-shaping legacy
View
Date:2025-04-18 20:36:36
A new, permanent addition to the sprawling National WWII Museum in New Orleans is a three-story complex with displays as daunting as a simulated Nazi concentration camp bunk room, and as inspiring as a violin pieced together from scrap wood by an American prisoner of war.
The Liberation Pavilion — set to open Friday with ceremonies including around 40 surviving veterans of the war — is ambitious in scope. Its exhibits filling 33,000 square feet (3065.80 square meters) commemorate the end of the war’s death and destruction, emphasize its human costs and capture the horror of those who discovered the aftermath of Nazi atrocities. Films, photos and recorded oral histories recount the joys and challenges awaiting those who returned from battle, the international effort to seek justice for those killed and tortured, and a worldwide effort to recover and rebuild.
Underlying it all is the idea that almost 80 years later, the war’s social and geopolitical legacies endure — from the acceleration of civil rights and women’s equality movements in the U.S. to the formation of international alliances to protect democracy.
“We live in a world created by World War II,” Rob Citino, the museum’s Samuel Zemurray Stone Senior Historian. said when asked what he wants the pavilion’s visitors to remember.
It’s a grim tour at first. Visitors entering the complex pass a shimmering wall of military dog tags, each imprinted with the name of an American killed in action, a tribute to the more than 414,000 American war dead. The first centerpiece exhibit is a large crate used to ferry the coffin of an Army private home to his family in Ohio.
Steps away is a recreation of the secret rooms where Anne Frank and her family hid from the Nazis in Amsterdam. Then, a dimly lit room of wooden bunks and life-size projected images of the emaciated survivors of a Nazi concentration camp. Nearby is a simulated salt mine, its craggy walls lined with images of centuries-old paintings and crates of statuary — representing works of art plundered by the Germans and recovered after the war.
Amid the bleakness of the pavilion’s first floor are smaller and more hope-inspiring items, including a violin constructed by an American prisoner of war. Air Force 1st Lt. Clair Cline, a woodworker, used wood scavenged with the help of fellow prisoners to assemble the violin as a way of fighting the tedium of internment.
“He used bed slats and table legs. He scraped glue from the bottom of bits of furniture around the camp,” said Kimberly Guise, a senior curator at the museum.
The pavilion’s second floor focuses in part on what those who served faced upon returning home — “the responsibilities at home and abroad to defend freedom, advance human rights, protect democracy,” said Michael Bell, a retired Army colonel and the executive director of the museum’s Institute for the Study of War and Democracy.
Black veterans came back to a homeland still marred by segregation and even violence against people of color. Women had filled non-traditional roles at home and abroad. Pavilion exhibits make the case that their experiences energized efforts to achieve equality.
“Civil rights is the fifties and women’s equality is more more like the sixties,” Citino said. “But we think both of those seminal changes in American society can be traced back in a significant way to World War II.”
Other second-level exhibits include looks at the Nuremberg war crimes trials, the post-war emergence of the United States as a world superpower and the formation of international alliances meant to sustain peace and guard against the emergence of other worldwide threats to freedom.
“We talk about NATO or the United Nations, but I don’t know that most people understand that these are creations, American-led creations, from the war,” said Bell. “What our goal is, at least I’d say my goal, is to give the visitor a frame of reference or a lens in which way they can look at things going on in the world.”
The third floor includes a multi-format theater with moving screens and a rotating audience platform featuring a production of images and oral histories that, in Bell’s words, “really lays out a theme about freedom under pressure and the triumph of of the American-led freedom.”
Museum officials say the pavilion is the final permanent exhibit at the museum, which opened in 2000 as the National D-Day Museum — a project spearheaded by two University of New Orleans professors and historians, Gordon Mueller and the late author Stephen Ambrose.
It soon expanded to encompass all aspects of the Second World War — overseas and on the home front. It is now a major New Orleans tourist attraction and a downtown landmark near the Mississippi River, highlighted by its “Canopy of Peace,” a sleek, three-pointed expanse of steel and fiberglass held roughly 150 feet (46 meters) over the campus by towers of steel.
The Liberation Pavilion is the latest example of it the museum’s work to maintain awareness of the war and its aftermath as the generation that lived through it dies off — and as the Baby Boom generation raised on its lore reaches old age.
“World War II is as close to the Civil War as it is to us. It’s a long time ago in human lives, and especially our media-drenched culture. A week seems like a year and 80 years seems like five centuries,” said Citino. “I think the museum realized a long time ago it has a responsibility to keep the memory of this war, the achievement of that generation alive. And that’s precisely what Liberation Pavilion’s going to be talking about.”
veryGood! (56318)
Related
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Why Sister Wives' Christine Brown Almost Went on Another Date the Day She Met David Woolley
- What's open New Year's Eve 2023? What to know about Walmart, Starbucks, stores, restaurants
- Horoscopes Today, December 30, 2023
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Denmark's Queen Margrethe II to abdicate after 52 years on the throne
- Owen the Owl was stranded in the middle the road. A Georgia police officer rescued him.
- After a grueling 2023, here are four predictions for media in 2024
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Anderson Cooper on freeing yourself from the burden of grief
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Federal appeals court temporarily delays new state-run court in Mississippi’s majority-Black capital
- You Won’t Disengage With This Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Gift Guide
- 16-year-old boy fatally stabbed on a hill overlooking London during New Year’s Eve
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Hack, rizz, slay and other cringe-worthy words to avoid in 2024
- Niners celebrate clinching NFC's top seed while watching tiny TV in FedExField locker room
- Billy Joel jokes about moving to Florida during late-night New Year's Eve show in New York
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
Planning to retire in 2024? 3 things you should know about taxes
Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi is declared winner of election that opposition wants redone
Hong Kong activist publisher Jimmy Lai pleads not guilty to sedition and collusion charges
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Michigan didn't flinch in emotional defeat of Alabama and is now one win from national title
Happy Holidays with Geena Davis, Weird Al, and Jacob Knowles!
Hack, rizz, slay and other cringe-worthy words to avoid in 2024