New York's September 11 Memorial Museum readies for its close

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Credit: Reuters/Mike Segar


Two steel ''tridents'' recovered from the World Trade Center site after September 11, 2001, stand in the entry pavilion area of the 911 Memorial Museum, which is under construction, at the World Trade Center site in New York, July 2, 2013.


Among the first visitors to the National September 11 Memorial Museum are victims' family members and others intimately involved in its creation who will attend on Thursday, after a Wednesday media preview.


The doors open to the general public on May 21.


The museum's two main exhibition spaces, both underground, recall September 11, 2001, when hijacked planes slammed into the World Trade Center's twin towers, the Pentagon and a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania, killing nearly 3,000 people.


An 'In Memoriam' exhibition, on the footprint of the World Trade Center's South Tower, commemorates the lives of victims.


A historical exhibition, on the footprint of the North Tower, focuses on the attacks, what preceded them and what has happened since.


Some of the most moving displays are wrecked emergency vehicles, nearly 2,000 oral histories and poignant personal items that belonged to victims.


A large hall displays a so-called slurry, or retaining, wall that survived the attacks and a 36-foot column from the Trade Center site covered with mementoes, inscriptions and missing posters.


'It is incredible, and it will wind up affecting different people in different ways, depending on their experiences,' said Joel Shapiro, whose wife Sareve Dukat died in the South Tower.


Shapiro said he plans to be a docent at the museum.


The museum is the result of eight years of work, with input from curators, educators, architects, preservationists, victims' family members, survivors, first responders, local residents, business owners and others.


It has been a key part of a complex and often contentious process of rebuilding the World Trade Center site that was reduced to the heaps of rubble and ash known as Ground Zero.


A recent controversy involved moving unidentified remains of victims to Ground Zero. Some family members objected, saying it was wrong to store them at what is essentially a tourist site.


'Part of the ongoing drama of the site is that you have 3,000 families, and they don't agree with each other,' said Richard Hankin, director of a documentary film '16 Acres' that traced the contentious rebuilding process.


'There's so many ways to be upset,' he added.


(Editing by Scott Malone and Richard Chang)


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