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Brazil’s National Museum Reopens After Fire, Showing the High Cost of Saving History

1 week ago 9

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Brazil’s National Museum in Rio de Janeiro has started to reopen seven years after a huge fire destroyed most of its collection. The fire happened in September 2018 and destroyed about 90% of the museum’s 20 million objects.

Official reports say the fire started in an air conditioning unit, and there was no evidence of arson. The museum is inside the São Cristóvão Palace, a historic building that was once home to Brazil’s royal family.

It became a museum in 1892 and was the largest of its kind in Latin America before the fire. Years of low funding and poor maintenance made the building vulnerable to disaster.

Restoring the museum is a massive project. The total cost is about 517 million reais, or $95 million. So far, the government and private donors have provided most of the money, but there is still a gap of about 170 million reais.

Brazil’s Education Ministry says it is working to secure the rest. The full reopening is planned for 2027. Right now, visitors can see three restored rooms.

Brazil’s National Museum Reopens After Fire, Showing the High Cost of Saving HistoryBrazil’s National Museum Reopens After Fire, Showing the High Cost of Saving History. (Photo Internet reproduction)

These include the Bendegó meteorite, which survived the fire, and a 15-meter-long sperm whale skeleton, the largest on display in South America. The museum has also received 14,000 new items from donors around the world, including rare indigenous artifacts.

Brazil’s National Museum Rebuilds After Tragic Fire

The museum’s recovery is not just about rebuilding walls. Teams have worked to save important pieces, like parts of Luzia, the oldest human fossil ever found in the Americas. The museum has also installed new safety systems to prevent another disaster.

The National Museum is important for Brazil’s science and education. It trains researchers and helps people learn about the country’s history and culture. The Federal University of Rio de Janeiro runs the museum and says it is vital for both research and public education.

The fire showed what can happen when important places do not get enough care or money. The museum’s slow recovery is a warning for other countries: protecting history costs money and effort, but losing it costs even more.

The story of the National Museum is about loss, hard work, and the real price of saving history for future generations.

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