Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit officially inaugurated the Arab League Museum on Sunday, describing it as a new “knowledge fortress” dedicated to preserving the institution’s historical legacy and safeguarding the collective memory of the Arab world.
Speaking at the opening ceremony at the League’s headquarters in Cairo, Aboul Gheit said the museum builds on a major project to digitize and document the Arab League’s archives, including hundreds of thousands of diplomatic documents, treaties, correspondence and historical resolutions dating back to the organization’s founding in 1945.
He said the museum was designed not only as an exhibition space but also as a center for research, education and cultural awareness, operating according to international museum and preservation standards.
Aboul Gheit said the museum would provide researchers and future generations with access to the “living memory” of Arab joint action and the milestones that shaped modern Arab history.




