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Obama hails ‘true spirit’ of 9/11 at new museum

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US President Barack Obama Thursday hailed the love and sacrifice he said was "the true spirit of 9/11" as he inaugurated a searing Ground Zero museum about Al-Qaeda attacks which killed nearly 3,000 people.

Obama said the museum, in the footprint of the former World Trade Center Twin Towers, would ensure that the horror and heroism of September 11, 2001 would never be forgotten by future generations.

Obama said it was an honor to recall "the true spirit of 9/11 -- love, compassion, sacrifice -- and to enshrine it forever in the heart of our nation."

"I want to express our deep gratitude to everybody who was involved in this great undertaking for bringing us to this day, for giving us this sacred place of healing and of hope," he said.

Former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg said the museum was a "sacred marker of our past" and a "solemn gathering place."

The museum, with its 10,000 artifacts, provides an emotionally bracing experience likely to revive terrible memories of the attacks, which shattered the illusion that mainland America was insulated from threats facing much of the rest of the world.

Inside, a map charts the path of four hijacked airliners sent on a suicide mission on a crisp but fateful morning nearly 13 years ago.

There are poignant reminders of the people who went to work that day and never came home -- a set of charred credit cards and a woman's shoe, as well as a crushed and burned fire engine memorializing the 343 New York firefighters who died.

An FDNY fireman looks at the last column recovered at the World Trade Center site at the dedication ...
An FDNY fireman looks at the last column recovered at the World Trade Center site at the dedication ceremony for the National 9/11 Memorial Museum on May 15, 2014 in New York City
John Angelillo, Pool/AFP

A huge iron column, the last recovered from the site in May 2002, is on display, along with stairs from a nearby street that were used by hundreds of people to flee the site of the drama.

In the bowels of the museum, visitors can examine the foundations of one of the towers which once defined New York's skyline but which collapsed in a murderous cloud of fire and ash after being hit by planes used as massive suicide bombs.

Exhibits take an in-depth look at the events of September 11, including an analysis of the background to the attacks and an examination of how the after-effects are still being felt today.

Visitors, who are barred from taking photographs, can hear the last telephone messages to loved ones left by New Yorkers trapped in the burning towers.

In all, there are 23,000 still images, more than 500 hours of film and video and more than 2,000 archival documents at the museum.

US President Barack Obama Thursday hailed the love and sacrifice he said was “the true spirit of 9/11” as he inaugurated a searing Ground Zero museum about Al-Qaeda attacks which killed nearly 3,000 people.

Obama said the museum, in the footprint of the former World Trade Center Twin Towers, would ensure that the horror and heroism of September 11, 2001 would never be forgotten by future generations.

Obama said it was an honor to recall “the true spirit of 9/11 — love, compassion, sacrifice — and to enshrine it forever in the heart of our nation.”

“I want to express our deep gratitude to everybody who was involved in this great undertaking for bringing us to this day, for giving us this sacred place of healing and of hope,” he said.

Former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg said the museum was a “sacred marker of our past” and a “solemn gathering place.”

The museum, with its 10,000 artifacts, provides an emotionally bracing experience likely to revive terrible memories of the attacks, which shattered the illusion that mainland America was insulated from threats facing much of the rest of the world.

Inside, a map charts the path of four hijacked airliners sent on a suicide mission on a crisp but fateful morning nearly 13 years ago.

There are poignant reminders of the people who went to work that day and never came home — a set of charred credit cards and a woman’s shoe, as well as a crushed and burned fire engine memorializing the 343 New York firefighters who died.

An FDNY fireman looks at the last column recovered at the World Trade Center site at the dedication ...

An FDNY fireman looks at the last column recovered at the World Trade Center site at the dedication ceremony for the National 9/11 Memorial Museum on May 15, 2014 in New York City
John Angelillo, Pool/AFP

A huge iron column, the last recovered from the site in May 2002, is on display, along with stairs from a nearby street that were used by hundreds of people to flee the site of the drama.

In the bowels of the museum, visitors can examine the foundations of one of the towers which once defined New York’s skyline but which collapsed in a murderous cloud of fire and ash after being hit by planes used as massive suicide bombs.

Exhibits take an in-depth look at the events of September 11, including an analysis of the background to the attacks and an examination of how the after-effects are still being felt today.

Visitors, who are barred from taking photographs, can hear the last telephone messages to loved ones left by New Yorkers trapped in the burning towers.

In all, there are 23,000 still images, more than 500 hours of film and video and more than 2,000 archival documents at the museum.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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