VideoDespite controversy, 9/11 museum inaugurated at Ground Zero
Museum, built where Twin Towers stood, will open to the public on May 21
On the eve of the dedication of a museum commemorating the September 11, 2001 attacks, Charles Wolf made no secret of his apprehension at a site he associates with the death of his wife Katherine.
“I am looking forward to it and dreading it. It brings everything up,” Wolf said.
After three years of delays, controversy and financial trouble, the museum will be inaugurated today in a ceremony to be attended by President Barack Obama before opening its doors to the public on May 21.
The museum, based where the Twin Towers once stood near a permanent memorial that opened in 2011, appears modest, almost intimate, with only one floor that can be seen from the outside compared to the towering skyscrapers that surround it.
But the atrium at Ground Zero is only the museum’s visible part.