Feeling the echoes of the past at the Partition Museum, Amritsar.
Visiting a historic Museum always gives us some deep insight into the culture , life and suffering of the people. Our visit to Partition museum was not less than an adventure that gives us goosebumps. Our visit to the museum was during our Amritsar trip. The museum is quite popular among the visitors and it reminded us the suffering of the people that they had to go through during the partition in 1947.

Like any other museum that displays, artifacts, art etc., this museum is quite different. The museum focuses on personal stories. The museum is known as a "People's Museum," basically due to the facts that it focuses on collecting and displaying stories, documents, and materials from the people affected by the Partition, including oral histories and personal artifacts. It took us 10 min to reach the historic site situated in midst of the busy street of Amritsar.

The Partition Museum building is famous for being the world's first museum dedicated to the 1947 Partition of India, located in the historic Town Hall building. The goal of this museum is honoring those who lost their homes and loved ones and becoming a central repository for Partition related memories and documents. The town hall building has a huge fort like structure. It has statue of Raja Ranjit sing and a small fountain right in the middle of the entrance.



The arched entrance to the townhall was beautifully decorated chandeliers. It gives us a different feeling while making our way towards the historical place.
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The Town Hall building was built in the 19th century and became a site of historical importance during the Partition era. It was a structure that witnessed the unrest and violence that followed the event. Entering the complex shows us some images of the freedom fighters pasted on the wall.

While the rest of the space is used for the various recreational purpose. Being one of the tourist spot, it has shops, cafe and playing zone for the kids the entire area was bustling with people.




Seeing the rush inside the complex made us clueless. We were confused if we were actually at a museum site or not. But the museum ticket is at one corner of the complex. There is a specific portion of the building which is occupied for museum purpose. The entrance ticket cost us Rs.10 per person.

The museum has multiple galleries with diverse exhibits, including original artworks, photographs, and multi-media displays that capture the trauma, displacement, and lasting impact of the Partition. The Partition is considered to be one of the black chapter in our history. An estimated 14 million people were displaced, and as many as 1 million died in massacres, sexual violence, and due to disease and starvation as they fled across the new borders. The museum showcases all the suffering with some photos may give goosebumps. Photography is strictly prohibited inside the museum, the guards and the staff member were very strict and alert regarding photos and videos. So all who went inside just made sure to take the deep dive into feel the pain. I manage to capture only this golden switches from inside the museum.

We spent good 2 hrs inside the museum, listening to various documentary and reading the various stories of the Partition. It is one of the cruelest phase. One photographs where an eagle sitting on the dead corpses on the street really shaken me. No one could ever imagine what the people of our nation gone through during the colonial era. Partition Museum is the official link that can put more limelight on the museum.
In good faith - Peace!!



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Thank you :)
You're welcome, have a nice day ❤️
How are you friend? I hope you are well. Museums really hold a lot of memories. When we visit museums, we can learn about ancient history and gain a lot of knowledge.
these museum is always a learning playground for history enthusiast
Yes friend 🥰
Partition museum must be poignant, historical, and heroic for all the visitors, especially for the folks who live in that area. It is good there is a dedicated space for people and heroes who does during partition, and allow their souls to be honored and respected by the new generation. The place witnessed the bittersweet years of the partition, and seeing those artifacts, documents, and images gives the place a proper recovery.
This one is what I like the most. Not because it is pleasing to my eyes but because it contains these wonderful souls and heroes.
The museum is good in the part that they want to sure visitors can feel the emotions inside so they prohibit taking of photos and videos. You are fast taking the golden switches photo haha. Great job! Thank you for sharing this story @steemflow. So enjoyable to read❤️
these are the picture of the common man who lost everything during partition. these are the glimpses, there were more pain inside the gallery area.
Only when I get there personally I can see and feel the pain you are trying to let me know @steemflow. But through reading I had a glimpse. Thanks for bringing us with you❤️
that treue...sometimes words cant explain the pain the people suffer but the images photos and real life story does in more better way
Were there already any incident of captured visitors doing the crime of taking photos inside?
Don't know but the way there is a tight security. Many people including foreigners like to take pictures and publish them outside...I belive it is good not to take such picture.
This looks so deep and emotional… visiting places like this really makes history feel real.
indeed, a good place to get familiar with our background...they suffer a lot during those days
So much beauty and history, I love these places and the witches too.... this photo is fascinating!

it adds a different aura to the place.....i missed the night lighting, must be more attractive than what it appears at day time.
I loved that place, how the spaces change at different times of the day. Thank you!
Oh wow, this is pretty interesting. I just learned about the partitioning a short time ago when I was watching the Ms. Marvel series on Disney+. I never knew anything about it before then. What a hard time this must have been for the country. It's good that they commemorate it as a humble reminder of the past.
It aas on3 of the deadliest partion. Pakistan was separated from India and becomes a separate nation. But what appears to be a peaceful event was very bloodiest...like a train full of people were massacred, the entire village were wiped out etc..there many stories...some of the picture from the museum were heart warming.
We had a similar event here in the US. Very tragic!
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Brother, I feel privileged to have visited this publication. This building is truly important to your country and is steeped in history. The photographs literally take us on a journey with you, and you describe everything with such affection that it is impossible not to connect with your words and the events you recount. I leave happy to have been here and send you a sincere hug from afar 🙏