In the year 2017, Rung Museum in Dharchula opened it doors to locals and tourists who were eager to get a glimpse of the life and times of the elusive Rung Tribes of Pithoragarh.
The double-storied pink building is hard to miss. It stands tall in the heart of the Dharchula main market, on the Indian Nepal road. Open six days a week from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 and then from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. except on Sundays and Government Holidays, the Rung Museum has a lot to offer to its visitors.

A wonderland of ancient artefacts, buildings, art and craft, manuscripts some over 100 to 250 years old bring alive tales of the Rung Tribes which live in the Darma, Chaudas and Vyas Valley, even today.
Called ‘The Pride of Dharchula’ the Rung Museum is continuously adding more exquisite items to its catalogue that gives the walk-ins a glance of the rich cultural heritage of the tribes that flourish in this part of the hill-state. Handlooms, artistic wooden door and window frames, cloth, jewelry, utensils, crop, costumes bring alive a typical Rung village within the museum’s four-walls.

Ritesh Garbyal, the Curator and his team of three others who help in maintaining the Rung Museum, tells us, “In the past one and half years we have had close to four thousand five hundred locals as well as tourists walk in through our doors. Our visitors from home and abroad are amazed at the layout of the artefacts that we have painstakingly collected over a long period of time, restored and put on display. ”
While the entry ticket for Dharchula residents is a nominal 10/- rupees, folks from other states have to give Rupees 50/- and foreigners have to shell out Rupees 100/-, to enter the museum. Once inside, the visitor is transported back in time, living amongst the elusive tribes of the Dharchula belt, an experience worth the trip.




























































Founder of Kartavya Karma, Gaurav Aggarwal tells us, “all 62 women who work for us come here from nearby villages. They make earrings, necklaces, anklets, bags with vibrant colour cloth specially purchased from Rajasthan such as cotton, raw khadi, jute, indigo material for these women who stitch magic with their needle and thread.”
Today this unique initiative has brought fame and fortune to habitants of Talla Gethia, Gethia Malla, Gethia Senetorium, Gethia Padaav, Jeolikote and Chiliyanaula villages as most of the artisans of Kartavya Karma belong to these villages.
In the near future Gaurav Aggarwal visualizes, “to evolve a handicraft village, complete with a training, workshop and display centre with a grand Aipan gallery. A place where our clients can see the work we, learn and order customized items from the growing number of talented artists who join us.”

The menu boasts of mouth-watering traditional Garhwali dishes such as bhatwani, chausa, bhanjeer chutney, mandua rotis (Millet Bread), Chaulaee roti (Amaranth Bread), brown and red rice, and to end it all, jhingora kheer (millet dessert) to treat your sweet tooth.



