Mongolia ditches tyrant-osaurus Lenin for the real thing
BEIJING: Once he bestrode his world, lending his name to more museums, streets, monuments and public institutions than any other 20th-century figure.
But in the Mongolian capital, Ulan Bator, it is goodbye Lenin, as a political dinosaur makes way for the real kind.
A museum once dedicated to the Soviet dictator is to be transformed into a centre to display Mongolia's wealth of prehistoric fossils, including that of a 70-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus bataar.
The grand building, which still boasts a giant bust of Vladimir Ilyich, has been used as offices for several years, but the government has earmarked the complex for a dinosaur museum.
''Mongolia has been sending dinosaur exhibits abroad for 20 years,'' the Minister for Culture, Sports and Tourism, Oyungerel Tsedevdamba, said. ''We have a wonderful dinosaur heritage but people are not aware of it.''
The Lenin Museum opened in 1980, when the country was a Soviet satellite.
''It was a very grand museum with Lenin's statue, everything embellished with red flags and with pictures of Lenin's childhood and history,'' the minister said.
Since the transition to a multi-party democracy in 1990, the Mongolian People's Party has been based in the building, which has also housed a bar and restaurant; at one stage Lenin's bust gazed over pool tables.
Guardian News & Media
But in the Mongolian capital, Ulan Bator, it is goodbye Lenin, as a political dinosaur makes way for the real kind.
A museum once dedicated to the Soviet dictator is to be transformed into a centre to display Mongolia's wealth of prehistoric fossils, including that of a 70-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus bataar.
The grand building, which still boasts a giant bust of Vladimir Ilyich, has been used as offices for several years, but the government has earmarked the complex for a dinosaur museum.
''Mongolia has been sending dinosaur exhibits abroad for 20 years,'' the Minister for Culture, Sports and Tourism, Oyungerel Tsedevdamba, said. ''We have a wonderful dinosaur heritage but people are not aware of it.''
The Lenin Museum opened in 1980, when the country was a Soviet satellite.
''It was a very grand museum with Lenin's statue, everything embellished with red flags and with pictures of Lenin's childhood and history,'' the minister said.
Since the transition to a multi-party democracy in 1990, the Mongolian People's Party has been based in the building, which has also housed a bar and restaurant; at one stage Lenin's bust gazed over pool tables.
Guardian News & Media
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