This news is as old as March 2013, but when i came across i got so interested with what i read and decided to share it wit my distinquished BI readers.
“We have decided to prepare the body of our “Comandante President,” to
embalm it so that it remains open for all time for the people,”
Venezuelan Vice President Nicolás Maduro declared on Thursday, in
announcing plans to preserve Hugo Chávez’s body and showcase it in a
glass tomb at a military museum near the presidential palace.
Here are the most notable members of the exclusive club:
Vladimir Lenin, Russia. Died: Jan. 21, 1924
Call him a trendsetter. Lenin was the first communist revolutionary
to be encased in glass upon his death, and his body is now on display in
Moscow’s Red Square
at Lenin’s Mausoleum, commonly known as Lenin’s Tomb. But that might
not last forever given public opposition to the memorial. In 2011, for
instance, a member of the ruling United Russia party created a website
where people could vote on whether to bury the former Soviet leader (the
vary majority of respondents voted in favor of burial).
Mao Zedong, China. Died: Sept. 9, 1976
The founder of the People’s Republic of China
ruled the nation from its establishment in 1949 until his death. Though
he reportedly wished to be cremated, the chairman’s mausoleum went
under construction immediately after Mao died and was completed by the
following May.
Kim Il Sung, North Korea. Died: July 8, 1994
Like his neighbor to the north, Kim Il Sung ruled the Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea from its inception in 1948 until the day he
died. Draped in a Workers Party of Korea flag, his body is on display at
Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, also known as the Kim Il Sung Mausoleum.
Kim Jong Il, North Korea. Died: Dec. 17, 2011
Kim Jong Il, who led North Korea from his father’s death in 1994
until his own demise nearly two decades later, was put on display in the
same shrine that houses his father. Dennis Rodman visited the remains
of both former leaders during his recent trip to North Korea.
Ho Chi Minh, North Vietnam. Died: Sept. 2, 1969
The communist revolutionary established the Democratic Republic of
Vietnam in 1945 at Ba Dinh Square, where his body now rests. The Ho Chi
Minh Mausoleum was inspired by Lenin’s Mausoleum in Moscow, and his body
is watched over by an honor guard.
Ferdinand Marcos, the Philippines. Died: Sept. 28, 1989
Marcos was president of the Philippines from 1965 to 1986, but died
in exile in Hawaii. Nonetheless, his remains were returned home in 1993,
and his body was put on display inside the Marcos Museum and Mausoleum
in the city of Batac. This week, the mortician who embalmed Marco
offered some advice (and his services) to Venezuela. “They must not
delay choosing an embalmer,” he said, adding that he would not use resin
to preserve Chávez as was done with Lenin.
Pope John XXIII, The Vatican. Died: June 3, 1963
Angelo Roncalli led the Catholic Church from 1958 until his death,
and his body is now on display at St. Peter’s Basilica. He was known for
forging better relations with other religions, and was beatified on
September 3, 2000.
In 2001, it was reported that Vatican officials had found the
pontiff’s bodily remarkably well-preserved when they opened his coffin
after nearly four decades as part of an effort to transfer his remains
from a Vatican crypt. His body was soon put on display in St. Peter’s
Square, with the pope’s face covered in a thin layer of wax.
Source: informationng
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