The capital of India is a bustling hub of 17 million people and one of the centers of modern Indian life. It is chaotic and crowded, yet filled with beautiful gardens and history dating back thousands of years. You can see massive monuments from the Mughal kings of the 16th and 17th centuries, as well as one to the British Raj of the early 20th century. Many monuments and museums charge for entry, but visitors can still have fascinating experiences there for free.
LODHI GARDEN
Lodhi Garden in a posh neighborhood of south Delhi is a destination beloved by locals that offers a lot to tourists, as well. You can watch the wealthy Delhi society wives speedwalking on the jogging track, join in a cricket match with children on the lawns or feed the ducks in the pond. Its monuments, unlike others in the city, are free of charge. You'll find a tomb to 16th-century ruler Sikander Lodhi, the Bara Gumbad complex and several other structures with surviving traces of intricate designs. A recent tourism push has spread informative signs throughout the garden. If you want to relax, you can always find a chaiwallah walking by to sell you a cup of hot tea from his pot. But that will cost you.
OLD DELHI
Old Delhi is the vibrant heart of the city, its sidewalks crowded with markets and vendors selling street food or chaat, its roads a hazard of bicycle rickshaws, three-wheelers and veering motor scooters, its skies a tangle of haphazard electrical
INDIA GATE
The towering India Gate, New Delhi's answer
LOTUS TEMPLE
India is filled with religious sites, but one of the most iconic is the Baha'i Lotus Temple. The starkly white temple is in the shape of a partially blooming lotus flower, its petals layered one upon the other. Outside sit nine pools. Visitors get a brief explanation of the Baha'i faith and then are allowed in the inner sanctuary for quiet contemplation.
QAWWALI SINGING
One of the lesser-known sites in Delhi is the Nizamuddin Dargah, a complex of tombs, mosques and stalls centered on the burial site of revered Sufi saint Nizamuddin Auliya. On Thursday evenings, Nizamuddin's tomb transforms into a venue for a concert of devotional qawwali music. The audience sits on a wide marble courtyard in front of the tomb while singers perform hauntingly beautiful songs backed by musicians playing the accordion-like harmonium and the tabla drums. On hot summer nights, men wildly swing gigantic fans across the crowd to try to cool guests down.







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