Preserving the Story of 9/11 | 60 Minutes Archive
In a poignant exploration of memory and memorialization, Lesley Stahl takes viewers behind the scenes of the 9/11 Museum in her 2013 visit, a year prior to its grand opening. Within its walls, history is not just remembered, but actively preserved, encompassing the profound debates and difficult choices faced by curators and stakeholders in representing one of America’s most painful tragedies.
As part of the celebrated “60 Minutes” series, which has delivered incisive journalism since 1968, this segment underscores the delicate balance between honoring those lost and providing a space for reflection. From artifacts to narratives, every decision in crafting the museum is steeped in sensitivity and respect, aimed at educating future generations about the events and their far-reaching impact.
This episode serves as an essential reminder of the importance of preserving history—an endeavor that resonates deeply amid ongoing conversations about identity, resilience, and commemoration. Join Lesley Stahl as she navigates this emotional terrain, offering a glimpse into the monumental task of capturing the essence of September 11th, 2001, for years to come.
Watch the full story and engage with a piece of history on the “60 Minutes” YouTube channel, and don’t forget to explore more segments that push the boundaries of journalism and storytelling.
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Video “Preserving the story of 9/11 | 60 Minutes Archive” was uploaded on 09/11/2025 to Youtube Channel 60 Minutes
We Americans will never ever forget
9/11 just turned 24 years old today
Anyone 2025
It’s September 11, 2025. I’m a retired firefighter/medic. My retired USAF son and I visited the 9/11 Memorial & Museum in June of this year. We were both deeply moved. I witnessed three firefighters die back in 1974. Those memories never go away.
To the memorial & museum I say Well done. Brian in Minnesota
We went to the Memorial & Museum in February of this year, and whilst I have seen a few, no documentary will prepare you for what you will see there. I was completely overwhelmed by it. May all the victims Rest In Peace.
America has already forgotten, look around.
We must never forget. What that means is that we also must never forget the reason why were attacked. It was not just a few "radicals." We were attacked by a massive ideology that still exists and is growing in this country today based on the misapplication of "freedom of religion." Our 1st amendment was never intended to be a suicide pact. The people that attacked us were not radicals. They were obedient to the commands laid out in their books that instruct them that this is the way to their version of paradise. We can't be afraid to have those conversations in fear of coming across as "intolerant." We should be intolerant of some things so that something like 9/11 never happens again. The uncomfortable truth is that this was and still is 100 percent avoidable.
RIP Orio Palmer and all who we lost that day and continue to lose.
❤
My name is Moses Zongrah Kollie, and I am from Liberia. I would like to share a tribute to Remembering 9/11 through poetry, entitled “The Triumph of 9/11.”
September 11
will go down in history—
a day the world remembers,
a day etched in time.
And the world
will never forget
the brave and beautiful image
of our heroic firefighters.
The police—
many are grieving at home,
having lost family, friends,
and colleagues.
People stood in line,
donating blood with love.
And we—
We will never forget.
This day speaks
a message of hope,
hope for the present,
Hope for the future.
This is a day
marked by triumph,
a day to remember 9/11,
a day of victory.
Sad. Twin towers Should have been rebuild. I think.
I went here this july when I went to nyc for a concert at Madison square garden. I brought my twelve year old daughter to this place. She's too young to remember in real time. I asked her if she wanted to see the jumper part, she said yes. She asked why did they jump? I told her if you were above the fire line, you had two choices, burn alive or instant 💀 by jumping. She looked and said but you shouldn't do that, unaliving, I told her no you shouldn't but if God doesn't understand why they chose that, in that situation, he's wrong. They were put in an impossible choice and neither option was good.
We spent half a day here, slowly seeing, and I was telling her how I found out. I was 15 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, in 10 grade algebra 2 with geometry when there were five people who had cellphones saying something happened in nyc. We, the students, convinced our teacher to put the TV on and we all said, you know there's multiple airports around nyc so maybe faulty guidance systems, accident or something like that. When the second plane hit, this boy, I forgot his name but I still know what he looked like, said, what's that, pointing to the plane. We knew it wasn't an accident then. Hard museum to see but necessary because it's still history, bad history but still history.
11 hours ago?
I visited the Memorial in October 2022. It took my breath away with how amazing it was put together. The recovered items, the pictures of the victims, the damaged artifacts, and parts of the towers themselves. Also the infinity pools at where the towers once stood were beautiful as well. The people there do a fantastic job preserving it and I hope to visit it again someday
you preserve the "story"
we will preserve the facts
7 stories down scares me 😮
Who's watching 9/11 in 2025 ? 24 years later and our hearts still ache with pain 💔
Never Forget. Never Again
The memorial forms a deep dark shadow of what once stood. Brilliant. Sad.
I was teaching reading to Grade 2 in the cafeteria in a Central FL school because my classroom AC was broken. The kitchen staff kept the TV screens on silent news. They'd come out to read the headlines. We were on the last page of, The Day Peter Stuyvesant Came To Town. Final page is a two-page b&w print of Manhattan Island. The cook called me over to the TV when the first plane hit. I gave the students a written assignment. I returned to the TV and we watched as the second plane hit. 'Those buildings are going down,' I whispered. Class was over.
Bro it’s my birthday today
We keep letting people who hate this country cross the border every day. Thank God for President Trump
The folding of steel Tower 3 onto its blueprint in seconds (free fall speed) with "fire on two floors" is curious to say the least.