Editor Pick
Indira Ghandi Museum
- July 28, 2000
- Rated 4 of 5 by
Amanda from London, United Kingdom
This famous female Prime Minister's house, complete with blood stains where she was assassinated by her own bodyguards, is fascinating. It's just south of New Delhi's centre, and the house has been converted into an excellent museum.
The house itself is a huge, elegant affair, with long, undulating lawns (suspiciously green, for the climate). Inside, the house has been converted downstairs into a standard museum layout, with corridors inserted between rooms, but upstairs the family atmosphere of the private family accommodation has been maintained, with much of the original furniture and decoration.
Following the Golden Temple siege in Amritsar, where a number of Sikhi extremists were killed on a raid of the building by Indian forces, the Prime Minister's Sikhi bodyguards turned on her in the garden, and shot her to death. The patches of blood which stain the paving stones have been covered in plastic, so they are preserved for viewing; and given the crowds around the stains, they seem very well viewed indeed.
Other ghoulish exhibits include her son's clothes, the ones he was wearing when assassinated some years later, reconstructed in a case.
Indira Ghandi's family was at the centre of Indian politics for many years after the creation of the country, and her relatives are still involved. Expect a attitude of worship from some of the other tourists there - this is a serious place for many of the Indian visitors. There's a very interesting collection of Indira Ghandi's letters, papers, and maps and documents relating to her affairs. There are also a lot of photographs of the whole family, from the 1910s onwards. Not to be missed.
From journal Delhi - exciting, vivid, and hot!