The museum is beautiful, but highly politicized. But there is something to see. I advise you to visit. Even the enemy needs to be known in order to successfully fight him.
We were disappointed. Such a name and very mediocre content... I saved the audio guide a little, otherwise it's really sad. There are very few exhibits for such an area.
The museum is the most modern, there are many visual expositions, it was built very expensively and on a grand scale, the advantages end there.
Unfortunately, they were probably in a hurry to open the museum and forgot... that in addition to the German treaty with the USSR in 1939, there were also German treaties with Poland, France, Great Britain in 1934-1938 and the seizure of Czechoslovakia by Germany together with Poland in 1938. They are silent about this.
It was funny to read the caption under the photo "houses destroyed in 1945 by Soviet bombs" (the Nazis had nothing to do with it, Soviet bombs were to blame for the destruction). It became clear that you will not find the truth here. Sorry. The Slavs' brothers are being zombified to the fullest... an unprepared viewer may get the impression that Poland was liberated by the Americans, and not by the Red Army and the Polish Army.
I recommend everyone to visit the museum to make up their mind. For those who feel sorry for the money for such "art" I recommend - there is free admission on Tuesdays, check on the museum's website.
The museum is very politicized in favor of modern political trends.
A lot of things are turned inside out, served at a very specific angle.
Moreover, the Poles themselves agree with this in private conversations.
At the same time, if you do not pay attention to what the audio guide says, there are a lot of interesting and rare exhibits.
Whether to go or not is up to you.