Emigration Museum

Throughout the days of the 60 Million Gdańsk 2022 Congress, you are cordially invited to visit a unique place for every Pole. A place where the symbols of Polish emigration are collected, the Emigration Museum in Gdynia. It is available free of charge to participants of our event (available by special password)

18-20 August 2022

10:00-18:00

Permanent exhibition tour

Emigration Museum in Gdynia

ul. Polska 1,  81-339 Gdynia

Participants of the 60 Million Gdansk 2022 Congress have the opportunity to use the museum's offer free of charge: "Permanent exhibition" + audio guide. In order to take advantage of this opportunity, you need to provide a special password at the museum box office, this password will be available from the Congress staff during the event. So, ask for the password and visit the Emigration Museum in Gdynia free of charge (travel on your own). This opportunity is available to you throughout the duration of the Congress from 18 to 20 August during the Museum opening hours (10:00 - 18:00).

 

The permanent exhibition of the Emigration Museum in Gdynia is the first exhibition in the country telling the story of emigration from the Polish territories during the last 200 years in such an extensive way. It presents the experiences of people leaving their homeland, their fears, their hopes, and also the reasons and the consequences of the emigration. It is a story of people setting off on a journey into the unknown, of social, cultural and economic changes that they experienced, it is the legend of Gdynia and of the Polish ocean liners. It is a story of prominent Polish emigrants,people who are known abroad, but frequently forgotten in their own homeland, and a story of the Polish diaspora – the people who have been cultivating the culture and the traditions of the country of their ancestors. Finally, it is a story of returning, of the Polish identity and of its many faces.

Among the many attractions that await visitors, there is the “Batory Under Construction” project, which features the world’s largest model of a passenger ship (under construction). The visitors can also follow the journey of the emigrants leaving for the USA in the early 20th century – starting with a rail journey, the long voyage across the Atlantic, the Ellis Island Immigration Station and ending with building a new life abroad. The exhibition ends in contemporarytimes. It starts and ends with an installation in the shape of a silver globe, where visitors can listen to the recollections of the Polish emigrants from all over the world, recounting their experiences.