So it looks like we’ll be visiting the Aga Khan Palace on our site seeing afternoon in Pune. Some information about the palace:
The Aga Khan Palace was constructed by Sir Sultan Muhammed Shah Aga
Khan III, in the year 1892. Built in Yerwada, near Pune, it was intended
to be a source of employment for the famine-struck villagers in the
surrounding areas. Prince Shah Karim al-Hussayni Aga Khan IV, successor
to and grandson of Sir Sultan Muhammad Shah Aga Khan III, donated the
palace to the Government of India in 1969, in memory of Mahatma Gandhi
and his philosophy.
The Aga Khan Palace is also known as the Gandhi National Memorial
because of its close association with Mahatma Gandhi, who was kept at
this palace under house arrest in the 1940s. His wife, Kasturba Gandhi,
and his long-time aide, Mahadev Desai, both died of dysentery while
under house arrest in this palace, and their samadhis (memorials) were
built here by Charles Correa. A museum inside the palace complex has a
rich collection of pictures and photographs of the important incidents
in his life. There is also a wide assortment of his personal items,
including utensils, clothes, mala, chappals (slippers), a letter written
by Gandhi on the death of his secretary, and so on. A small amount of
Gandhi’s ashes are kept here as well.
Aga Khan Palace is in Kalyani Nagar, Pune
This palace was one of the filming locations of Richard
Attenborough’s biopic of Gandhi, Gandhi. Since 1980, the museum,
samadhis and campus of the Aga Khan Palace has been managed by the
Gandhi Memorial Society. Exhibitions are held at the palace on a regular
basis to showcase the life and career of Mahatma Gandhi.
This palace also is the headquarter of Gandhi National Memorial Society.
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