Museum launches programmes to mark Gandhi's 150th birth anniv

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The at Monday launched a series of programmes, including "recreated heartbeats" of the father of the nation, kickstarting the year-long celebrations to mark

"is in our blood," he said after inaugurating the programme.

The museum will also have for visitors a media kit, comprising a pen drive that will have rare pictures and video footage, and a documentary by A K Chettiar of Gandhi.

It also contains 100 specially-curated pictures, Gandhi's voice, a virtual tour of his ashrams and his favourite bhajans, a said.

"(The pen drive has) perhaps the only footage of (social reformer Gopal Krishna) Gokhale and standing with him a Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, dressed tidily in a suit," the museum's A Annamalai said.

Footage from the Quit Movement, speeches of Gandhi, Netaji Subhas and (former prime minister) Jawaharlal Nehru are also on the pen drive.

Besides, Gandhi's visit to the North West Frontier Province along with Khan and Noakhali - Peace Pilgrimage - are part of the documentary, he said.

There are a select 100 photographs of Gandhi from his place of birth in Porbandar to his memorial at the in the kit, Annamalai said.

The pictures are in the form of a power point presentation.

Gandhiji's speech 'Spiritual Message of Mahatma Gandhi' recorded in in 1931, the one at the Asian Relations Conference here in 1947 and the Post Prayer Speech on Cleanliness and Hindu Muslim Unity in 1947 among others, are part of the multi-media collection, he said.

The kit, priced at Rs 300, is available in Hindi, English and Tamil. Chief Ministers of Tamil Nadu, and will launch it Tuesday. The contents of the kit will be released in other Indian languages soon, he said.

Director, Centre for Peace Studies, said Gandhi was the reason he came to in 1989.

Jahanbegloo, who was born in Iran, asserted the relevance of Gandhian thoughts in the present world.

"Many parts of the world are facing problems because leaders there do not understand the message of Mahatma Gandhi," said the after inaugurating an exhibition 'Non Violence and World Peace',

He also claimed that the legacy of Mahatma Gandhi was adopted by many world leaders like who made it their own and used in their struggles against injustice and oppression.

The event was also attended by Managing Director, and Development Corporation, K Naryana and the museum's among others.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, October 01 2018. 21:30 IST