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Warsaw Rising Museum, Poland

Located in Warsaw, Poland's Wola area, the Warsaw Rising Museum (Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego) honors the 1944 Warsaw Uprising. Although the museum's institution was founded in 1983, no construction was done for several years. On July 31, 2004, the 60th anniversary of the rebellion, was opened.Research on the history of the rebellion and the assets of the Polish Underground State is funded by the museum. To paint a complete picture of the individuals involved, it gathers and preserves hundreds of items, from love letters to the weaponry the insurgents used. Creating an archive of historical data on the rebellion and documenting the experiences and recollections of active participants are among the museum's stated objectives. Its director is Jan Ołdakowski, and his deputy is the Polish Academy of Sciences historian Dariusz Gawin.The Platform of European Memory and Conscience counts the museum as one of its member organizations.Every facet of the Warsaw Uprising is covered in the museum.

Photographs, audio and video, interactive displays, relics, written recollections, and other testimonials of life during the German occupation of Warsaw, the uprising, and its aftermath are all part of the exhibitions, which span multiple floors. Each of Warsaw's districts has its own display. Numerous free educational pamphlets and posters are available (in Polish and English), including 63 calendar pages that span the periods of August 1, 1944, to October 2, 1944. Each page provides an overview of the key events that occurred on that specific day of the revolt.The "little insurgent" chamber is devoted to the experiences of the youngest rebels and kids during the rebellion. The room has a colorized picture of Róża Maria Goździewska, a girl who was referred to as "the little nurse," and a reproduction of the "little insurgent" memorial.

The Kino Palladium is a small theater that continuously plays original material captured by rebel filmmakers in 1944. This footage was used to create newsreels that were screened during the uprising in Warsaw's Palladium theater.

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Poland Visa

Non-EU nationals must apply for a Schengen visa in order to receive a tourist visa for Poland. The maximum stay permitted by this visa in the Schengen area, which includes Poland, is 90 days within any 180-day period. Usually, applications are made via a Visa Application Center (VAC) run by VFS Global.  The approval rate for Poland tourist visas is high, at over 85%. This indicates that only a small portion of applications usually rejected and that is due to incomplete documentations. Poland visa is not free an

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