A museum commemorating the September 11, 2001 attacks will open on the former site of the World Trade Center in May, it was announced today.
The museum, based where the Twin Towers used to stand near a permanent memorial which opened in 2011, will comprise two exhibitions, the foundation in charge of the project said.
The first exhibition -- "In Memoriam" -- pays tribute to the 2,977 people who lost their lives in the 9/11 attacks, in addition to the six victims of a previous bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993.
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Artifacts on display include personal belongings of those who died, pieces of the destroyed buildings, photos, audio and video footage as well as first person testimonials.
The museum will be open to the public from May 21, after five days of tributes to families of victims and rescuers from May 15-20.
"The 9/11 Memorial Museum is for all of us. It is for those of us who witnessed the events, either with our own eyes or on TV, and are still struggling to make sense of it," New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a statement.
"It is for future generations who will first encounter 9/11 as history, but who must come to understand it as something real and terrible, something that must never happen again," de Blasio added.
Nearly 3,000 people died on 9/11 when Al-Qaeda suicide attackers hijacked four commercial passenger jets. Three slamed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon while the fourth crashed in a field in Pennsylvania.