Speech by Prince Rahim Aga Khan at the opening of the Humayun World Heritage Site Museum

Speech by Prince Rahim Aga Khan at the opening of the Humayun World Heritage Site Museum

Bismillah-ir-rahman-i-rahim

Honourable Minister of Tourism and Culture of India,
Director General, Archaeological Survey of India, 
Excellencies,
Distinguished Guests, 
Ladies and Gentlemen,

It is a pleasure to be with you here this evening.

Our gathering today celebrates the culmination of the initiative launched in 1997, when, to mark the 50th anniversary of India’s independence, His Highness the Aga Khan offered the nation and its capital the restoration of the gardens of Humayun’s Tomb.

So began, as a further chapter in a long-shared history, another fulfilling collaboration with the people and government of India.

The Humayun World Heritage Site Museum, inaugurated today, marks an accomplishment well beyond a building sensitively conceived within its landscape, its artefacts and its exhibits, and its intellectual offering. It marks a completion phase of the Nizamuddin Urban Renewal Initiative, a model public-private partnership.

At the turn of the millennium, His Highness the Aga Khan began to envision this entire area as a coherent cultural ensemble in a 300 acre-landscape. Integral to that aspiration was the will to improve the quality of life of the residents of the Hazrat Nizamuddin Basti, and to revive crafts and artistic traditions in danger of disappearing.

Beyond the restoration of the iconic Tomb, its gardens, and another 60 monuments – 20 are which are on the UNESCO World Heritage list – the Initiative has created the 90-acre Sunder Nursery, has upgraded public open spaces, has improved school and healthcare facilities, has implemented education and health programmes, public sanitation, water and waste management schemes, and has sponsored cultural revival through festivals, concerts and performances.

For over two decades now, the Aga Khan Trust for Culture has been honoured to work alongside the Archaeological Survey of India, the Central Public Works Department, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi, corporate and philanthropic partners, international donors, sister agencies within the Aga Khan Development Network, and, most importantly, with the citizens of Delhi and residents of Nizamuddin.

Together, we have strived to create for the world an exemplar of thoughtful, collaborative urban revitalisation.

Museums and historic landmarks preserve and reveal the story of humanity. Inherently, they are places that foster connections among people as we delve into our collective, intricate past, and consider how we can collaboratively shape a unified and better future.

The Museum thus serves as a link, not only joining Humayun’s Tomb with the Sunder Nursery, but also bridging the gap between history and the present.

Blended into the landscape and quietly sunken below gardens and fountains that surround finely crafted mausolea, the Museum will enhance the experience for millions of domestic and international tourists visiting the World Heritage Site. Within its walls, the story of Humayun’s life, travels, and legacy come alive.

The impact of this heritage was its commitment to pluralism, which is reflected in the distinctive architecture, literature, and customs that brought together diverse influences.

To enable a more profound understanding of the architecture and building craft traditions of the passing centuries, the Museum will shed light on the development of the Nizamuddin area over a millennium. It will, in the process, explain the pluralistic traditions that have defined Hindustani culture for at least five centuries.