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Updated: 02:06 pm GMT, February 04, 2036

New Betrayal museum opens


Moving, shocking exhibits



OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (RWN) - The Jews used this place once, with the high ceilings and the windows. It was a lush building, befitting their posture in society as money lenders and agents of influence.

But when the Great Zionist Betrayal happened in 2016, when the nuclear bombs went off in Washington, D.C., and New York City and it was discovered that the Israeli Mossad had set them off, Temple Beth El, outside of Kansas City, became a hiding place for the Jews. And it became their slaughterhouse. On June 8, 2016, less than a month after the explosions, a mob stormed the doors of the imposing temple and killed the two hundred Jews inside.

Now, some 20 years later, the site has become a museum dedicated to the memory of those who died in the Great Zionist Betrayal. It opens today.

There were 11 million who died in Washington and New York. Many of their names will never be known, but some 500,000 names that were known have been carved in granite outside the museum.

Inside, the exhibits are striking. Visitors are confronted with the skylines of Manhattan and Washington, when they were vital cities. There are exhibits on life in the city for children, on the business of each city. Then visitors walk into a small chamber. The room goes black. And an audiotape of a business meeting being held across the Hudson River in New Jersey plays.

"So, we're here today to talk about the pending litigation of the Schwab ... What? What was that? Did something just happen in..." and then the voice disappears in a shriek of pain and the rolling sound of the blast wave from New York.

The lights come back on and visitors are taken to the next room - images taken the day of the blast. Burn victims, parentless children walking around, charred dolls in their hands. They hear the voices of the victims. They see a room full of shoes collected from victims in Washington -melted, burned through, barely recognizable.

From there, they go to a room of detailed exhibits on how and why the Israeli government planned the attacks. The next room details how the FBI discovered the plot.

Throughout the museum are ample spaces to sit and cry, or just reflect, before heading out to the Peace Garden, through the gates with the words "Never forget."


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