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Ukraine Museum opens in Berlin air-raid bunker
Summary
A privately funded Ukraine Museum opened in a Second World War air-raid bunker in central Berlin, exhibiting remnants of the invasion and materials gathered with help from Ukrainian institutions and frontline units.
Content
Berlin's new Ukraine Museum has opened in a Second World War air‑raid bunker in the city centre. It launched in the week marking the fourth anniversary of Russia's full‑scale invasion of Ukraine. The privately funded exhibition was assembled with assistance from the National Military History Museum in Kyiv and frontline troops. Curators say the displays are intended to convey the physical reality of the conflict and to remind visitors that the war continues in Europe.
Selected details:
- The museum presents remnants of the invasion alongside documentary material and personal accounts collected from Ukraine.
- Organisers, including curators Wieland Giebel and Enno Lenze, travelled to Ukraine to gather objects and information for the displays.
- The project was created with support from the National Military History Museum in Kyiv and members of the 7th Rapid Response Corps in Pokrovsk.
- The curators describe the site as privately funded and say it will remain open for at least as long as the war lasts.
- The exhibition also references contemporary German political debate and notes concerns expressed by the curators about parties perceived as sympathetic to Russia.
Summary:
The exhibition seeks to make the consequences of the invasion more immediate for German audiences by showing material evidence and testimony. Curators say the museum will stay in place while the conflict continues and aims to keep public attention on the issue. Undetermined at this time.
