The House of Flowers and its accompanying museums dedicated to the memory of Josip Broz Tito offer visitors a glimpse into both the life and times of the man and his conflicted legacy. Located on Tito’s former residency in Belgrade’s wealthy neighborhood Dedinje, this peculiar historic sight is only a bus ride away from the center of town.
The House of Flowers and its accompanying museums dedicated to the memory of Josip Broz Tito offer visitors a glimpse into both the life and times of the man and his conflicted legacy. Located on Tito’s former residency in Belgrade’s wealthy neighborhood Dedinje, this peculiar historic sight is only a bus ride away from the center of town.
Lucy Moore, Nicholas ComrieSource:
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More than fifteen years have passed since the end of Yugoslavia, and even more since the death of its leader Josip Broz, better known as Tito. But the House of Flowers, Tito’s mausoleum, continues to remain a strange yet popular destination for locals and foreigners alike.
Today the people of the former Yugoslavia share a love-hate relationship with both the man and the country. Yugoslavia is remembered for its relative prosperity and its border-opening red passport, and Tito as the man who, on one hand made it all possible, but on the other left it all to crumble in his wake. Yugo-nostalgia, a yearnful affection for the lost country and its cultural icons, has emerged in the states of the former Yugoslavia and its diaspora, and the House of Flowers has become a point of pilgrimage for those who fondly remember the days gone by.
The House of Flowers and its accompanying museums, dedicated to the memory of Josip Broz Tito, offer visitors a glimpse into both the life and times of the man and his conflicted legacy. Located on Tito’s former residency in Belgrade’s wealthy neighborhood Dedinje, this peculiar historic sight is only a bus ride away from the center of town.
In its prime, the Tito Memorial Center offered nine separate sights including Tito’s presidential home, a memorial park, the House of Flowers, and several museums. Today, only the House of Flowers, the Museum of the 25th of May, and the Old Museum remain open to the public.
As the memorial center has been reduced in size, so too has public interest. But despite the drop in attendance, the center is still frequented by both international and former Yugoslav visitors, who leave behind messages such as:
“It was wonderful to live in your era”
“With great respect from an American soldier, ‘Long Live Tito’”
“Comrade Tito,
Well wishes from my family and I -Your Pioneer (Yugoslav Boy Scout)”
The House of Flowers
The House of Flowers (Kuća cveća), built in 1975, was originally designed to serve as Tito’s winter garden. Filled with exotic plants and complete with a view overlooking the capital city, the indoor garden was Tito’s favorite retreat. Due to his affection for the house, he requested that his body be placed there after his death.
Tito, the one time leader of the anti-facist Partizans, emerged from World War II as the president of the second Yugoslavia, a position he tightly held until his death on May 4, 1980.
As president, Tito broke from Stalin and the Soviet bloc early on, developing Yugoslavia as a non-aligned, socialist state in communication with both Cold War powers. Under his rule, the country prospered, but his presidency was not without flaws. He suppressed anti-Yugoslavian sentiment, quickly removed all potential political opposition, and ammassed a huge foreign debt which has now fallen on all the countries of the former state.
Although controversial even in his day, Tito’s funeral was a tremendous affair, and his death was mourned by the citizens of Yugoslavia and contemporary world leaders alike.
Following the service, Tito’s coffin was taken to the House of Flowers and laid in a white marble tomb, marked with the simple epitaph:
Josip Broz
Tito
1892-1980
In the days following his death, Tito’s body was ceremoniously carried by train from Ljubljana, through Zagreb and finally to Belgrade. In the capital of Yugoslavia, his coffin was first displayed in front of Parliament, then taken to his personal estate (now the grounds of the House of Flowers) and placed on the fountain outside the main entrance.
Tito’s funeral was attended by the likes of Leonid Brezhnev, Margaret Thatcher, Saddam Hussein, and Yasser Arafat. American President Jimmy Carter, however, was not in attendance but sent his mother Lillian Carter in his place, a decision met with much criticism at the time. Notably, his tomb bears no symbol. In particular, the absence of a red star has led to rumors questioning Tito’s loyalty to Yugoslavia and its Communist Party.
In addition to the tomb, the House of Flowers displays a recreation of Tito’s personal office and Chinese Salon, including the original furnishing used by Tito himself. The House also contains an exhibit of battons carried throughout Yugoslavia by representatives of the country’s youth in the days leading up to Tito’s birthday on May 25th. The battons were specially designed each year to highlight Yugoslavia’s greastest achievements, providing visitors today with insight into the development of the country under Tito’s rule.
Strangely the House of Flowers provides little information about the man whose body rests within its walls; however, employees of the house seem happy to share what knowledge they have, though they do so more freely in Serbian than in English.
While this lack of information may leave the average visitor somewhat unsatisfied, the sense of grandeur and secrecy conveyed by his tomb reflects the cult of personality Tito inspired as a leader, more myth than man.
Museums
The Old Museum and The Museum of the 25th of May both contain exhibits dedicated to Tito and his presidency.
The Old Museum opened in 1965 as an archive and display room for the range of gifts given to Tito by Yugoslav citizens and foreign diplomats. Today the museum displays only a small portion of the gifts Tito received during his presidency.
The first section of the museum includes hand stitched blankets and rugs which messages to “Comrade Tito,” while the second displays gifts from foreign diplomats and members of the Yugoslav diaspora.
The Museum of the 25th of May, named for Tito’s official birthday (the real date of his birth is unknown), currently has no permanent collection. Instead it hosts rotating exhibits, often drawing upon the large collection of gifts and letters sent to Tito over the decades of his rule.
For those in search of Yugo-nostalgia and an insight into one of the twentieth-century’s most enigmatic figures, the House of Flowers is well worth a visit, although a visit may raise more questions than it answers. However, it is this very mystery, emblematic of the depth and complexity of Tito’s character; that in part accounts for the continuing interest in the man who epitomized Yugoslavia: Josip Broz Tito.
Getting There:
The 94 bus from New Belgrade and the 40 and 41 from the center all stop at the base of Tito’s residency (second stop after the highway). The ride should take no more than 15 minutes from town.
I just read some of the comments regarding the Museum and Josip Broz Tito's Life. My son Alexei and I just visited the House of Flowers.The May 25th museum was currently working on a new exhibition to be opened at the end of June,2009.We have seen some additions and nice updates to the House of Flowers.They now charge a fee to get in and I have seen more and more people every time I go and visit. People even after all these years remember that he was a charismatic and great leader
of YUGOSLAVIA (* yes, not perfect) but who is ? Jovanka Broz lives just around the corner opposite of the Beli Dvor. Does anybody know of a good site dedicated to her?
Tito the Croat was one of the worst criminals ever lived. He was like Stalin or Hitler, his troops killed thousands of civilians, especially serbians, muslims, italians, bosnians, etc, even some soldiers from new zealand. Priests, families and children were thrown inside the ''foibe''!!! And this event took place during (1943) and after the war (1945). Everyone knows that. Everyone but the Croats, who are physically responsible for those crimes and continue to modify wikipedia to defend Tito.
(jackgreen, 19 April 2009 21:00)
I was there in October 2006 and there was hardly anybody except some other (i think japanese) tourists and the staff offcourse. I can imagine that a lot of people have bad memories of the man. But neglecting that the man ever existed is not a good way to deal with the past. I don't know if this is the reason for most people not visiting the museum, but visiting out of 'interest' doesn't harm anybody.. The man is history!! ;)
(Nils, 20 December 2007 01:22)
Hi,
I visited Tito's tomb in February 2006, I was the only visitor and, to be honest, it is as if modern Belgrade has forgotton he ever existed. Whatever anybody now thinks of Tito and his regime, it is clear that his legacy will live long in all the former parts of Yugoslavia. I know several Slovenes, Croats and even one or two Serbs who remember a time when a Yugoslav Passport enabled them to visit both the 'west' and 'east'. But, i guess, it is a different world now
(Eoin Drea, 1 June 2007 16:19)
I visited Tito's tomb in 2001 with my cousin. I think we were the only visitors that day. Quite frankly, I think it is a waste of space. The Serbs should sell Tito's remains and crypt to Croatia. Serbia will never move on until it rids itself of the memory of that man.
(JohnBoy, 20 May 2007 04:28)
Thankyou Nate for your support. To Publious i would like to point out that i certainly know more about Broz than you. The reason why i was born and brought up in the UK was because my grandfather was exiled in 1945 by Tito. Exiled on lies and trumped up charges. However, whilst you were born in a country ruled by a dictator, with constant control over your news and media, rivers of money being poored in to your economy, in a ethnic muddle acting out some Shakespearean illusion that 'Yugoslavia' was a utopia... i was being brought up in a true democratic, wealthy and respected state.
I support Serbia and argue her cause through the UK media. I have called Tony Blair an 'idiot' on BBC national radio. However, this has not resulted in me being harmed in any way. To call Tito and idiot on national radio would have been a suicide note.
(Anthony Shelmerdine, 30 March 2007 11:05)
Big surprise, you reflect everything in Anthony's sentiment about Tito. Silence all dissent and criticism while trying to deflect the conversation elsewhere. There are two sides to every coin and underneath Tito's carefully managed PR exterior was an ugly underbelly of despotic rule.
And trying to compare Tito and Bush are ludicrous. Tito defines true freedom? At least if you criticize Bush, you don't get shipped off to a "work camp" or disappear mysteriously. I dislike Bush as much as the next person, but saying that he's worse than Tito is laughable.
(Nate, 18 March 2007 23:35)
Josip Broz Tito was foremost a Croat who with the help of "Serbian" communists created false nations and false republics at the expense of the Serbs. Face it people. It wasn't the Serbs who wanted out of Yugo. It was all the others Serbs thought were their bretheren. That was Tito's plan. It is a result of his policy that Serbs are today fighting to keep their land and identity. Only, the Serbs didn't realize this until the breakup of Yugo....A plan that was a long time in the works.
(Danny, 14 March 2007 06:00)
Nice story, even though I was born after Tito's death (so I didn't live in that area) I wish I'd lived that time, I'm alb. from Kosovo and Tito was the best time we ever had and probably will ever have.
good education, good health system, etc (stuff that many western countries don't have and are keen to).
I hear some ppl here saying that Tito was tyrant, no my friend Tito was not such (and I can freely say that one has no knowledge about that time if one makes such an assumption), but now YU is broken and you can say anything you want to. But we ppl from former Yu deserve this "now" situation prosperity cuz it was us that broke our own country, now what is left are scraps which equal to 0 - NULL!
(Crimson, 26 February 2007 11:26)
To Anthony Shelmerdine,
Please do not talk about what you have no clue of. The U.S.A are the real tyrants, crossing borders and not following human laws. You take time to criticize a man who had to terminate individuals who sought to divide the Yugoslavs by religious grounds.. Yet you have no time to mention what type of country you live in. Your president is the tyrant, not Josip Tito.. Tito is a man who defines freedom in every sense.
(Publius, 22 February 2007 03:19)
The place may reveal little about 'the man' but without communist progaganda to hide behind 'the man' was a tyrant. Hopefully people will remove the rose tinted glasses and reject the absurd cult of Josip Broz and learn that he replaced a monarch with a more autocratic and despotic monarch... himself.
All the killings post 1945 seem to be forgotten. All the peasant vendetta's, murder, theft, gulags. It wasn't Ceausescu's Romania but it certainly wasn't the utopia that some believe.
(Anthony Shelmerdine, 12 February 2007 18:04)
The Yugoslav History Museum and the Museum of the 25th of May are jointly operated, but neither offers a permanent exhibit. The Yugoslav History Museum is in the center of town in Nikola Pasic square and houses rotating exhibits. Despite its name, exhibits there do not always pertain to Yugoslavia. For instance, the museum is currently hosting an exhibit on Chinese bronze work.
The Museum of the 25th of May is located on the same grounds as the House of Flowers. The museum also does not have a permanent exhibit, except for the cars you saw displayed at the entrance to the building. Exhibits in the Museum of the 25th of May tend to draw from a collection of items received by Tito during his presidency, but do not always. The most recent exhibit displayed holiday greeting cards sent to Tito over the years, but the upcoming exhibit features a Croatian photographer.
You're right, there is not much information available in English. The museum website does provide one English page though ([link]) and a contact email address for further inquiry.
Good luck with your search.
(Lucy, 12 February 2007 13:32)
Hi lucy, could you please please explain to me the difference between Museum of Yugoslav History and 25th May Museum. Are they both the same or...? Also, according to my mum, when she was younger the 25th May museum featured a history of yugoslavia, what's happened to that exhibition? it's really hard to find info regarding the museums in English, any help would be great appreciated. I visited the place last year and all they had were afew of Tito's cars and that's it. Regards
gemma_brewertons@yahoo.com.au
(jeju, 10 February 2007 11:26)
Hi,
I visited Tito's tomb in February 2006, I was the only visitor and, to be honest, it is as if modern Belgrade has forgotton he ever existed. Whatever anybody now thinks of Tito and his regime, it is clear that his legacy will live long in all the former parts of Yugoslavia. I know several Slovenes, Croats and even one or two Serbs who remember a time when a Yugoslav Passport enabled them to visit both the 'west' and 'east'. But, i guess, it is a different world now
(Eoin Drea, 1 June 2007 16:19)
To Anthony Shelmerdine,
Please do not talk about what you have no clue of. The U.S.A are the real tyrants, crossing borders and not following human laws. You take time to criticize a man who had to terminate individuals who sought to divide the Yugoslavs by religious grounds.. Yet you have no time to mention what type of country you live in. Your president is the tyrant, not Josip Tito.. Tito is a man who defines freedom in every sense.
(Publius, 22 February 2007 03:19)
Nice story, even though I was born after Tito's death (so I didn't live in that area) I wish I'd lived that time, I'm alb. from Kosovo and Tito was the best time we ever had and probably will ever have.
good education, good health system, etc (stuff that many western countries don't have and are keen to).
I hear some ppl here saying that Tito was tyrant, no my friend Tito was not such (and I can freely say that one has no knowledge about that time if one makes such an assumption), but now YU is broken and you can say anything you want to. But we ppl from former Yu deserve this "now" situation prosperity cuz it was us that broke our own country, now what is left are scraps which equal to 0 - NULL!
(Crimson, 26 February 2007 11:26)
Thankyou Nate for your support. To Publious i would like to point out that i certainly know more about Broz than you. The reason why i was born and brought up in the UK was because my grandfather was exiled in 1945 by Tito. Exiled on lies and trumped up charges. However, whilst you were born in a country ruled by a dictator, with constant control over your news and media, rivers of money being poored in to your economy, in a ethnic muddle acting out some Shakespearean illusion that 'Yugoslavia' was a utopia... i was being brought up in a true democratic, wealthy and respected state.
I support Serbia and argue her cause through the UK media. I have called Tony Blair an 'idiot' on BBC national radio. However, this has not resulted in me being harmed in any way. To call Tito and idiot on national radio would have been a suicide note.
(Anthony Shelmerdine, 30 March 2007 11:05)
The place may reveal little about 'the man' but without communist progaganda to hide behind 'the man' was a tyrant. Hopefully people will remove the rose tinted glasses and reject the absurd cult of Josip Broz and learn that he replaced a monarch with a more autocratic and despotic monarch... himself.
All the killings post 1945 seem to be forgotten. All the peasant vendetta's, murder, theft, gulags. It wasn't Ceausescu's Romania but it certainly wasn't the utopia that some believe.
(Anthony Shelmerdine, 12 February 2007 18:04)
Tito the Croat was one of the worst criminals ever lived. He was like Stalin or Hitler, his troops killed thousands of civilians, especially serbians, muslims, italians, bosnians, etc, even some soldiers from new zealand. Priests, families and children were thrown inside the ''foibe''!!! And this event took place during (1943) and after the war (1945). Everyone knows that. Everyone but the Croats, who are physically responsible for those crimes and continue to modify wikipedia to defend Tito.
(jackgreen, 19 April 2009 21:00)
The Yugoslav History Museum and the Museum of the 25th of May are jointly operated, but neither offers a permanent exhibit. The Yugoslav History Museum is in the center of town in Nikola Pasic square and houses rotating exhibits. Despite its name, exhibits there do not always pertain to Yugoslavia. For instance, the museum is currently hosting an exhibit on Chinese bronze work.
The Museum of the 25th of May is located on the same grounds as the House of Flowers. The museum also does not have a permanent exhibit, except for the cars you saw displayed at the entrance to the building. Exhibits in the Museum of the 25th of May tend to draw from a collection of items received by Tito during his presidency, but do not always. The most recent exhibit displayed holiday greeting cards sent to Tito over the years, but the upcoming exhibit features a Croatian photographer.
You're right, there is not much information available in English. The museum website does provide one English page though ([link]) and a contact email address for further inquiry.
Good luck with your search.
(Lucy, 12 February 2007 13:32)
I was there in October 2006 and there was hardly anybody except some other (i think japanese) tourists and the staff offcourse. I can imagine that a lot of people have bad memories of the man. But neglecting that the man ever existed is not a good way to deal with the past. I don't know if this is the reason for most people not visiting the museum, but visiting out of 'interest' doesn't harm anybody.. The man is history!! ;)
(Nils, 20 December 2007 01:22)
Josip Broz Tito was foremost a Croat who with the help of "Serbian" communists created false nations and false republics at the expense of the Serbs. Face it people. It wasn't the Serbs who wanted out of Yugo. It was all the others Serbs thought were their bretheren. That was Tito's plan. It is a result of his policy that Serbs are today fighting to keep their land and identity. Only, the Serbs didn't realize this until the breakup of Yugo....A plan that was a long time in the works.
(Danny, 14 March 2007 06:00)
I just read some of the comments regarding the Museum and Josip Broz Tito's Life. My son Alexei and I just visited the House of Flowers.The May 25th museum was currently working on a new exhibition to be opened at the end of June,2009.We have seen some additions and nice updates to the House of Flowers.They now charge a fee to get in and I have seen more and more people every time I go and visit. People even after all these years remember that he was a charismatic and great leader
of YUGOSLAVIA (* yes, not perfect) but who is ? Jovanka Broz lives just around the corner opposite of the Beli Dvor. Does anybody know of a good site dedicated to her?
Hi lucy, could you please please explain to me the difference between Museum of Yugoslav History and 25th May Museum. Are they both the same or...? Also, according to my mum, when she was younger the 25th May museum featured a history of yugoslavia, what's happened to that exhibition? it's really hard to find info regarding the museums in English, any help would be great appreciated. I visited the place last year and all they had were afew of Tito's cars and that's it. Regards
gemma_brewertons@yahoo.com.au
(jeju, 10 February 2007 11:26)
Big surprise, you reflect everything in Anthony's sentiment about Tito. Silence all dissent and criticism while trying to deflect the conversation elsewhere. There are two sides to every coin and underneath Tito's carefully managed PR exterior was an ugly underbelly of despotic rule.
And trying to compare Tito and Bush are ludicrous. Tito defines true freedom? At least if you criticize Bush, you don't get shipped off to a "work camp" or disappear mysteriously. I dislike Bush as much as the next person, but saying that he's worse than Tito is laughable.
(Nate, 18 March 2007 23:35)
I visited Tito's tomb in 2001 with my cousin. I think we were the only visitors that day. Quite frankly, I think it is a waste of space. The Serbs should sell Tito's remains and crypt to Croatia. Serbia will never move on until it rids itself of the memory of that man.
(JohnBoy, 20 May 2007 04:28)
Josip Broz Tito was foremost a Croat who with the help of "Serbian" communists created false nations and false republics at the expense of the Serbs. Face it people. It wasn't the Serbs who wanted out of Yugo. It was all the others Serbs thought were their bretheren. That was Tito's plan. It is a result of his policy that Serbs are today fighting to keep their land and identity. Only, the Serbs didn't realize this until the breakup of Yugo....A plan that was a long time in the works.
(Danny, 14 March 2007 06:00)
I visited Tito's tomb in 2001 with my cousin. I think we were the only visitors that day. Quite frankly, I think it is a waste of space. The Serbs should sell Tito's remains and crypt to Croatia. Serbia will never move on until it rids itself of the memory of that man.
(JohnBoy, 20 May 2007 04:28)
Big surprise, you reflect everything in Anthony's sentiment about Tito. Silence all dissent and criticism while trying to deflect the conversation elsewhere. There are two sides to every coin and underneath Tito's carefully managed PR exterior was an ugly underbelly of despotic rule.
And trying to compare Tito and Bush are ludicrous. Tito defines true freedom? At least if you criticize Bush, you don't get shipped off to a "work camp" or disappear mysteriously. I dislike Bush as much as the next person, but saying that he's worse than Tito is laughable.
(Nate, 18 March 2007 23:35)
Tito the Croat was one of the worst criminals ever lived. He was like Stalin or Hitler, his troops killed thousands of civilians, especially serbians, muslims, italians, bosnians, etc, even some soldiers from new zealand. Priests, families and children were thrown inside the ''foibe''!!! And this event took place during (1943) and after the war (1945). Everyone knows that. Everyone but the Croats, who are physically responsible for those crimes and continue to modify wikipedia to defend Tito.
(jackgreen, 19 April 2009 21:00)
The place may reveal little about 'the man' but without communist progaganda to hide behind 'the man' was a tyrant. Hopefully people will remove the rose tinted glasses and reject the absurd cult of Josip Broz and learn that he replaced a monarch with a more autocratic and despotic monarch... himself.
All the killings post 1945 seem to be forgotten. All the peasant vendetta's, murder, theft, gulags. It wasn't Ceausescu's Romania but it certainly wasn't the utopia that some believe.
(Anthony Shelmerdine, 12 February 2007 18:04)
Nice story, even though I was born after Tito's death (so I didn't live in that area) I wish I'd lived that time, I'm alb. from Kosovo and Tito was the best time we ever had and probably will ever have.
good education, good health system, etc (stuff that many western countries don't have and are keen to).
I hear some ppl here saying that Tito was tyrant, no my friend Tito was not such (and I can freely say that one has no knowledge about that time if one makes such an assumption), but now YU is broken and you can say anything you want to. But we ppl from former Yu deserve this "now" situation prosperity cuz it was us that broke our own country, now what is left are scraps which equal to 0 - NULL!
(Crimson, 26 February 2007 11:26)
To Anthony Shelmerdine,
Please do not talk about what you have no clue of. The U.S.A are the real tyrants, crossing borders and not following human laws. You take time to criticize a man who had to terminate individuals who sought to divide the Yugoslavs by religious grounds.. Yet you have no time to mention what type of country you live in. Your president is the tyrant, not Josip Tito.. Tito is a man who defines freedom in every sense.
(Publius, 22 February 2007 03:19)
Thankyou Nate for your support. To Publious i would like to point out that i certainly know more about Broz than you. The reason why i was born and brought up in the UK was because my grandfather was exiled in 1945 by Tito. Exiled on lies and trumped up charges. However, whilst you were born in a country ruled by a dictator, with constant control over your news and media, rivers of money being poored in to your economy, in a ethnic muddle acting out some Shakespearean illusion that 'Yugoslavia' was a utopia... i was being brought up in a true democratic, wealthy and respected state.
I support Serbia and argue her cause through the UK media. I have called Tony Blair an 'idiot' on BBC national radio. However, this has not resulted in me being harmed in any way. To call Tito and idiot on national radio would have been a suicide note.
(Anthony Shelmerdine, 30 March 2007 11:05)
Hi lucy, could you please please explain to me the difference between Museum of Yugoslav History and 25th May Museum. Are they both the same or...? Also, according to my mum, when she was younger the 25th May museum featured a history of yugoslavia, what's happened to that exhibition? it's really hard to find info regarding the museums in English, any help would be great appreciated. I visited the place last year and all they had were afew of Tito's cars and that's it. Regards
gemma_brewertons@yahoo.com.au
(jeju, 10 February 2007 11:26)
The Yugoslav History Museum and the Museum of the 25th of May are jointly operated, but neither offers a permanent exhibit. The Yugoslav History Museum is in the center of town in Nikola Pasic square and houses rotating exhibits. Despite its name, exhibits there do not always pertain to Yugoslavia. For instance, the museum is currently hosting an exhibit on Chinese bronze work.
The Museum of the 25th of May is located on the same grounds as the House of Flowers. The museum also does not have a permanent exhibit, except for the cars you saw displayed at the entrance to the building. Exhibits in the Museum of the 25th of May tend to draw from a collection of items received by Tito during his presidency, but do not always. The most recent exhibit displayed holiday greeting cards sent to Tito over the years, but the upcoming exhibit features a Croatian photographer.
You're right, there is not much information available in English. The museum website does provide one English page though ([link]) and a contact email address for further inquiry.
Good luck with your search.
(Lucy, 12 February 2007 13:32)
Hi,
I visited Tito's tomb in February 2006, I was the only visitor and, to be honest, it is as if modern Belgrade has forgotton he ever existed. Whatever anybody now thinks of Tito and his regime, it is clear that his legacy will live long in all the former parts of Yugoslavia. I know several Slovenes, Croats and even one or two Serbs who remember a time when a Yugoslav Passport enabled them to visit both the 'west' and 'east'. But, i guess, it is a different world now
(Eoin Drea, 1 June 2007 16:19)
I was there in October 2006 and there was hardly anybody except some other (i think japanese) tourists and the staff offcourse. I can imagine that a lot of people have bad memories of the man. But neglecting that the man ever existed is not a good way to deal with the past. I don't know if this is the reason for most people not visiting the museum, but visiting out of 'interest' doesn't harm anybody.. The man is history!! ;)
(Nils, 20 December 2007 01:22)
I just read some of the comments regarding the Museum and Josip Broz Tito's Life. My son Alexei and I just visited the House of Flowers.The May 25th museum was currently working on a new exhibition to be opened at the end of June,2009.We have seen some additions and nice updates to the House of Flowers.They now charge a fee to get in and I have seen more and more people every time I go and visit. People even after all these years remember that he was a charismatic and great leader
of YUGOSLAVIA (* yes, not perfect) but who is ? Jovanka Broz lives just around the corner opposite of the Beli Dvor. Does anybody know of a good site dedicated to her?