At the Chernobyl Museum, a Wartime Act of Memory Against Forgetting

On the fortieth anniversary of the world's worst nuclear disaster, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stood inside the National Museum Chernobyl in Kyiv alongside Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency. Together they cut the ribbon on "Chernobyl: People and Meanings," a new permanent exhibition that reframes the 1986 catastrophe not as a Cold War footnote but as living memory — one the current war has made urgent and dangerous in ways the original disaster-makers never anticipated.
The coincidence of dates is deliberate. April 26, 2026 falls during Russia's full-scale invasion now in its fifth year, with Ukrainian territory still partially occupied and the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant — Europe's largest — held by Russian forces since 2022. The exhibition's opening is a political act dressed as cultural stewardship.
Memory When the Site Is Still a Battleground
Chernobyl the place remains off-limits to most civilians. The exclusion zone straddling the border of Kyiv and Zhytomyr oblasts is partially under Ukrainian control, partially contested, and entirely hazardous. The International Atomic Energy Agency has maintained a continuous presence at Zaporizhzhia since 2023, monitoring reactor safety under conditions that its own reports describe as unpredictable. Grossi's attendance alongside Zelenskyy on this anniversary is not ceremonial. It signals that nuclear safety in Ukraine is still an active international crisis, not a historical one.
The museum, located in central Kyiv, has operated intermittently since Russia seized Chernobyl municipality in February 2022. It reopened briefly before being closed again due to security concerns. What the new permanent exhibition offers is a curated attempt to consolidate forty years of testimony, scientific record, and personal testimony before that record is further complicated by the fog of war and the attrition of living memory.
What Russia Made Necessary
There is a counter-narrative worth surfacing: Moscow will frame this exhibition, if it acknowledges it at all, through the lens of Soviet-era secrecy and the failures of the USSR — a narrative that conveniently recasts the current invasion as a corrective rather than a repetition. Russian state media has previously described the 1986 disaster as a product of Ukrainian administrative incompetence, a charge with no basis in the engineering record.
The structural reality is different. Russia currently occupies the Zaporizhzhia plant, has military personnel stationed inside its exclusion zone, and has disrupted cooling systems on multiple occasions. The Chernobyl site itself was seized within days of the 2022 invasion — not because it posed a threat, but because controlling it sent a message about the state's reach. An exhibition that insists on Ukrainian ownership of the Chernobyl story is, among other things, a refusal to cede that narrative.
The Architecture of Commemoration Under Fire
Exhibitions about catastrophe face a recurring tension: they must serve memory without replacing it with spectacle. The Chernobyl disaster, already the subject of a prestige HBO miniseries, a shelf of oral histories, and a tourism industry that turned radiation zones into adventure destinations, risks becoming wallpaper — something people know happened without feeling its weight.
The curators of "People and Meanings" appear to have oriented the exhibition toward first-person testimony and scientific record rather than catastrophe tourism. That choice matters. In wartime, when the distance between historical disaster and current crisis collapses, commemoration either deepens understanding or flattens it into propaganda. The IAEA's co-presence at the opening — Grossi is not a cultural figure — signals that this exhibition is intended to function as a record of a nuclear emergency, not a memorial in the sentimental sense.
Stakes and What the Exhibition Cannot Answer
If the exhibition succeeds, it anchors the Chernobyl story in Ukrainian agency rather than Soviet incompetence or Western rescue narratives. It preserves testimony from liquidators, evacuees, and scientists who are aging out of availability. It provides a reference point for future legal and environmental claims arising from the war's impact on nuclear infrastructure.
What it cannot resolve is the question of who controls the story's future. Russia holds Zaporizhzhia. Ukraine holds the museum. The radiation does not respect the front line. Grossi's presence at the opening suggests the IAEA intends to maintain its monitoring role regardless of territorial outcomes — a pragmatic acknowledgment that nuclear safety transcends sovereignty disputes until it doesn't.
The exhibition opens weeks after Ukraine's spring military operations resumed along the northeastern border, in an area not far from where the original exclusion zone begins. The fortieth anniversary is a milestone; the war makes it a checkpoint.
Desk note: The Chernobyl exhibition received modest wire coverage in Western outlets, most of which led with the anniversary angle rather than the wartime context. Monexus chose to foreground the IAEA presence and the Zaporizhzhia occupation as the structural frame, on the grounds that treating Chernobyl as a closed historical event is a distortion the current facts cannot support.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/V_Zelenskiy_official/5829