The Toilets museum.
India’s Toilet museum:
NEW DELHI (AFP) – A throne with a built-in commode for a
French monarch takes pride of place at a New Delhi museum trying to
break taboos surrounding toilets in a country where such convenience
remains a sensitive issue.
The replica of the wooden throne used by King Louis XIV is
among a treasure trove at the Sulabh International Museum of Toilets,
tucked away in a bustling suburb of the Indian capital.
The French king is believed to have
struggled with constipation and held audiences while defecating to save
time, say the museum curators.
Scores of curious visitors stop by daily to see the
centuries-old commodes, chamber pots and bidets as well as a 21st
century machine that turns human waste into ash in seconds. More were
expected for yesterday’s UN World Toilet Day which has events around the
globe.
“It is quite an unusual museum and I believe it’s the only
one of its kind in the world,” Bindeshwar Pathak, founder of the museum
and the non-profit Sulabh International, said.
“The idea was to start a healthy conversation about
sanitation and toilets. We wanted to tell people toilet is not a dirty
word,” he said, playing with a small black ball made from dried human
waste mixed with glue.
Pathak said the museum has gained traction since being named among the world’s top 10 wacky museums by Time magazine in 2014.
“Hundreds of visitors come now on the weekends,” said the 74-year-old, affectionately known as India’s ‘Toilet Guru’.
The walls of the museum are plastered with toilet room
jokes as well as Victorian-era pictures of ‘basket women’ in Europe
carrying night-soil – fertiliser made from human faeces.
Toilets are a touchy issue in India where
about 600 million people – nearly half of the population – defecate in
the open, according to Unicef.
Some 70 percent of Indian households do not have a toilet –
while 90 percent have access to mobile phones. More than half the world
population does not have a home toilet.
Experts say open defecation in India stems from poverty
and a belief that toilets inside the home are unclean. So people prefer
to squat in the open.
Three years ago, Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched a massive cleanliness drive, pledging to build toilets for all by 2019.
So far the government has helped install more than 50 million toilets across the country of 1.3 billion people.
The Delhi museum’s collection also draws the curious to
see a cushioned loo used in European gambling clubs which helped members
keep an eye on table stakes without having to take a break.
One 18th century pot used by French
royalty mocks the English by being designed as a stack of Shakespearean
classic books. “It is very interesting to see and read about the quirky
designs and the history behind them,” said Vinita Lodwal, a 25-year-old
studying to be a nurse.
“It’s informative and funny too,” said Lodwal, as she
posed for a selfie with her friend in front of an ornately designed
commode.
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