Words of Wisdom
Quotes from GATGA's Chairman, Governing Body & Senior Members
Chairman's Wisdom Corner
Rotating words of wisdom from GATGA Delhi's president — refreshed automatically every few seconds.
Voices of Our Members
Words of experience and inspiration from GATGA Delhi's senior and executive members.
Quote Collection
A curated library of wisdom, insight and inspiration from the guides of GATGA Delhi.
Tourist guides are the true cultural ambassadors of India. We do not merely show monuments — we open windows into civilisations.
Tourism is India's invisible export. Every satisfied visitor becomes our greatest ambassador, carrying the story of India home.
Every traveller who visits India carries back a piece of our heritage. It is our sacred duty to ensure that piece is authentic and enriching.
A certified guide is not a luxury — it is the difference between seeing India and truly understanding India.
When I stand in Diwan-i-Khas and look up at the ceiling, I think about all the emperors who stood exactly where I stand. That feeling never grows old.
Language is the bridge between cultures. Our multilingual guides ensure every visitor feels completely at home in the heart of India.
A good guide does not recite dates — a good guide makes you feel the weight of history, the texture of stone, and the pulse of a civilisation.
The Taj Mahal is not just a building — it is a love story frozen in marble. My job is to bring that love story alive for every person who stands before it.
Safety is never negotiable. Every guide must know not just the history of a monument but also how to keep every guest secure and comfortable.
India's diversity is our greatest gift. In a single day a guide can take a visitor through Islamic, Hindu, Sikh and Christian heritage. That is India's miracle.
My most rewarding moment is when a visitor from across the world says — India feels like home. That is what we are here for. That is our greatest achievement.
Every monument carries a hundred untold stories. Our greatest joy is finding those stories and sharing them — not as history lessons, but as living experiences.