The museum was presented by Djindjic's widow Ruzica Djindjic, who said that the aim of the project was to make her husband's work and life available to the public.
In attendance was German Ambassador to Serbia Wolfram Maas, who said that the German embassy enabled the translation of the museum's contents into German.
Djindjic was assassinated outside the Cabinet building in Belgrade on 12 March 2003. More than 70 foreign countries' delegations attended his funeral with several hundred thousand people filling the streets of Belgrade to pay their last respects.