Associated Press, Copenhagen | World | Sun, April 28 2013, 7:36 PM
A fire blazed through The Museum of Danish
Resistance in Copenhagen on Sunday, destroying large parts of the
building but most of the collection was saved, museum officials said.
No one was injured in the fire and firefighters and
staff who rushed to the scene in central Copenhagen managed to save the
majority of display items, museum spokesman Henrik Schilling said.
The fire started in the museum cafe around 2 a.m. and
quickly spread to the exhibition hall. The last pockets of fire were
being extinguished shortly after noon, Schilling said.
The museum is an affiliate of the Danish National Museum and
exhibits objects related to the Danish resistance to the German
occupation during World War II. The wooden building, located close to
the waterfront, was built specifically for its purpose in the 1950s,
Schilling said.
Nazi Germany's occupation of
Denmark started on April 9, 1940, and continued until the Germans
surrendered to the Allies on May 5, 1945. The Danish resistance movement
distributed illegal flyers and upheld secret radio communication with
the British. The resistance grew stronger toward the end of the war,
when acts of violent sabotage against factories and railways increased.
The cause of the fire is not yet known. Schilling said
it is still unclear if the building can be restored or needs to be
rebuilt entirely.
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