The Museum of Lemko Culture, in existence for twenty-five years, is located in the village of Zyndranova (Krosno county). The museum is owned and operated by Fedor Goch, an executive officer in the Union of Lemkos. Goch's museum has become on of the most visible symbols of, and a monument to, Lemko culture in Poland.148 It depicts life on a Lemko farm before the Vistula Operation, in a traditional dirt-floor cottage with a thatched roof which in several rooms are displayed turn-of-the-century artifacts such as furniture, utensils, and a hooded stove, as well as Lemko costumes, photographs, coins, paintings of Lemko churches, religious objects rescued from ruined churches, documents and publications on the Lemko Region.149 The museum also has a war memorial section, with relics from the 1944 battle at the Dukla Pass which Goch obtained while farming and scavenging the area: helmets, shell casings, canteens, etc.150 In conjunction with the museum, Goch began a religious festival, "Od Rusal' do Jana" (From Pentecost to St. John's Day) which highlights the Lemko culture of this festive period of the year. At the first festival, held June 20, 1992, Lemko folk ensembles from Ukraine ("Konar Lemkovyny" of Zhovtneve) and Slovakia ("Makovycja" of Svidynk) were among the participants.151 In 1993, a full slate of cultural activity was hosted by the museum. Besides the folklore/religious festival, there were exhibits: "the Lemko icon screen," "Lemko church artists," a celebration of Lemko poets152 on the occasion of the museum's 25th anniversary, and an exhibition of the works of famous Lemko painter Nykyfor Drovnjak on the 25th anniversary of his death.153 Various scenes of the museum are found in Appendix X.
There is also a Polish-run museum in the city of Sanok with a recreated Lemko village including a wooden church, and a significant collection of folk artifacts from the Lemko Region, and the outdoor Ethnographic Museum in Nowy Sacz contains a Lemko section.154