Guimet Museum The Museum of Colonial Thieves in Paris, France It is a world famous museum of the head.
The French thieves who looted art from all over Asia have a rich collection of Buddhist art dating back to 1879. They have collected national treasures from other countries in a way that has astonished the whole world. They have exhibited more than 45,000 - 100,000 Asian antiques from 48 Asian countries. Including Buddha statues from Afghanistan and pieces from Thailand. Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cyprus, Georgia, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Maldives, Mongolia, Nepal, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Syria, Tajikistan, Türkiye, Turmenistan, United Arab Emirates, Azbekistan Yemen, Tibet China Myanmar Laos Vietnam Cambodia Malaysia Philippines Indonesia, North Korea, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, East Timor, Kuwait, and the Maldives. On display in a 19th-century building in Paris.
The Louvre and the Guimet Museum are the best art museums that French thieves have hunted for other people's national treasures and brought them to their own country. The country that owns the real antiques did not allow them because these objects are national treasures that must be passed down as an artistic and cultural heritage. They are national heritages that must be preserved for future generations to study and learn about their history and identity. They cannot be sold or given to anyone. They must be in the country that owns these artworks. Only if they were stolen can they be possessed. The antiques that the French stole and kept at the "Guimet Museum" are evidence that binds the French, making it difficult for them to make excuses or defend themselves. Prepare yourself to receive the consequences of your actions.
The French, the opportunist, have taken other people's national treasures, which are so valuable that they cannot be valued in money, and put them on display, pretending to the world's population that they are their own collections (gathered through theft). What a disgusting and shameless behavior of those who call themselves "colonial hunters" who roam around, loot, and barbarically plunder, killing, raping, and destroying Asian countries until they are completely destroyed, leaving abandoned temples and castles, cutting off the heads of Buddha images, breaking open... Carved only the precious antiques, leaving only the ruins to be seen. The pain and suffering that the French predators have done to Thailand, Thai people and Asian countries will never forget!!
June 7, 2025, 09 : 27...
Read moreExhibits are lovely but customer service is disappointing, to say the least.
At the ticket booth, I asked for four tickets and then presented my disability card and the woman threw it back at me and told me to go somewhere else. I was confused because I obviously needed to buy tickets and told her that and she got upset and explained that I was supposed to present my card instead of getting a ticket. Still confused, I said I still needed to buy tickets because we’re four people. She said oh and sold me the two tickets. Essentially, she wasn’t even listening to me.
Then at the end of an exhibit, I left and realized there were no seats in the outside hall (I cannot stand for long periods of time), so I turned back (I was less than 2-3 meters away from the exit) and was told I wasn’t allowed back in, forcing me to stand waiting for my group.
I had a feeling when I presented my card on entry (instead of getting an official ticket) that their lack of tracking the number of disabled visitors would not bode well. But wow what a shocking disappointment. These employees need serious training in how to handle disabled visitors asap.
Review in English, but I spoke in French to employees, so no...
Read moreThe Guimet Museum is the largest museum in France and even in Europe for Asian arts. The building itself is outstanding with red facade and rock cut like caves filled with sculptures of mythical creatures. The collections of the museum were fascinating. They were from China, India, countries from Southeast Asia and some rarely seen Buddha statues and large sculptures from Cambodia. The curations for some important collections were in both French and English. In some artifacts from China, Chinese were displayed as well. When we visited, it happened to have two special exhibitions from China, one was for gold ware and jewelry from Ming Dynasty and another was exhibition for Tang dynasty. The both were amazing. We spent nearly five hours in the museum and felt not enough. Will highly recommend. The entrance is free if you have a museum pass. Even without, the price is reasonable....
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