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Did You Know About the International WWII Museum?

Most of us that live in Louisiana are familiar with the World War II museum. It is the number one rated attraction in our state, a well-deserved reaction to an amazing space and place. However, did you know there is an International World War II museum that is located in Natick, Massachusetts? Natick is a tiny community about 10 miles west of Boston, so next trip to Boston I’d put this on my “must see” list.

The archive of this museum is open to scholars and historians on an appointment only basis. This archive contains over a half million manuscript pages, 75,000 photographs, 3500 posters, 750 photo albums, thousands of maps and research books. These pieces are largely unpublished, so they provide a wealth of information that has yet to be circulated.

An interesting fact of the archive collection is the perception one can gain from reading the material that was distributed to those souls living in the region. Magazine article distributed to citizens in Japan, Russia, Germany or France contained many conflicting reports on the war. Many distortions and mistruths were printed in these publications making it easier for those of us in this century to understand how such atrocities as the plot to extinguish Jews could have gone on for so long and murdered so many.

The public museum collection offers amazing exhibits such as:

Rise of Nazism

Occupied Europe

Holocaust

Pearl Harbor

D-Day

Japanese War Trials

German War Trials

The following is a statement from the museum Director:

“The International Museum of World War II is about the causes and consequences of war, that war is very personal and the whole subject very complex.

War is horrible for just everybody caught up in it, but we can’t forget that for some – Hitler, Mussolini, Tojo – it was a fulfillment, an evil fulfillment. For some others, notably their military commanders, it is their business. German generals had been in World War I and considered the German surrender a time out-time to reorganize and reload.

For everyone else it was a nightmare. Those on the East and West coasts of the United States, there was a constant and real fear of invasion. As that possibility subsided there was the nightmare of fear for their loved ones in the war-for sons, husbands, brothers and friends who might be gone forever.

But it was also an inspiring time. The human spirit of good people to unite to defeat evil won out. It is this spirit that I was determined to save from disappearing into the darkness of history in the years after the war. I was concerned that those involved had to see the war as glorious in order to try to quell the nightmares of reality. In the Museum I have seen the perspective of World War II veterans change from telling their children about the glory to explaining the terror to their grandchildren.

The Museum is all about reality-everything displayed is original and everything is from the time that it happened. There are no retrospectives. Human events are lived in real time, not retrospectively. I wanted to collect, preserve and finally exhibit, what they read, what they used, all of the information that they were seeing and experiencing with the full understanding that no one can experience their anxiety.

It is an old cliché that those that don’t understand history are condemned to relive it (and this is one basic observation that Churchill didn’t utter). Perhaps, in the context of the Museum, a more apt observation is that history shows us that people don’t learn from history because they think they are special, their country is different, their times are special, all the while not appreciating that every generation before them felt the same way.

The mission of the Museum is to have people gain a sense of direct contact with the World War II generation, to see them as people like ourselves today, to identify with their concerns and fears, to understand what caused World War II internationally, and how it was brought to an end at a terrible price.

I am always taken aback when people blithely comment that we won World War II. The United States lost 425,000 soldiers; the world lost over 60,000,000 people. No one wins wars; we just fought to destroy evil and save ourselves from even worse times.

For me personally, the most satisfying part of forming this collection and establishing this Museum is the reactions of students. Our education program operates t maximum every day, and contrary to what every adult thinks, kids are very interested in history when they are shown it in human and personal terms. They don’t need “virtual reality”; they experience “real reality”. Our interactive is the visitor’s own mind. The thoughtful descriptions students write about what the Museum has meant to them personally is the most gratifying part of my work”.

I personally have a new excuse to get to Boston!

Kathryn


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