Before you enter the colossal alcove of nostalgia, wander amidst the lush gardens that embrace the building. The colonial structure with its teak paneled rooms and high ceilings, spacious verandas carrying an air of freedom and magnanimity, is an amazing thing to behold. The museum at Teen Murti has been primarily developed as a personal museum, with some of the rooms, such as the bedroom, the drawing-room and the study been maintained as they were at the time of Nehru's death. It is no surprise that you would feel as if Pt. Nehru has just left, keeping items of personal use intact. The experience augments with a visual media that traces Nehru's lineage to Kashmir, overhauls his childhood and youth, his years at Harrow and Cambridge, his toilsome career as a barrister and his glorious activities as a young gladiator who entered nationalist politics in 1917. Travel through myriad photographs and newspaper clippings that give a fascinating insight into the history of the independence movement and his association with Mahatma Gandhi, the father of the nation. Remember to see the excerpts taken from his will and inscribed on tablets around the wall. An object of great interest to holidayers is the Jawahar Jyoti, an eternal flame that keeps burning day and night, symbolizing the ideals for which Pt. Nehru lived and worked during his lifetime. |