Gulf News

Expo 2020 Dubai celebrates unity within diversity

World’s fairs have always mesmerised us as carnivals of culture, spectacles and dreams

- BY FAWAZ TURKI | ■ Fawaz Turki is a journalist, academic and author based in Washington. He is the author of The Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile.

At their core, world’s fairs, such as Expo 2020 in Dubai — the first ever to be held in the Middle East — are no less than an attempt by global cultures to demonstrat­e how, by imagining the future, they are together enabled to preempt tomorrow.

On one practical level, internatio­nal exhibition­s are designed, as is Expo 2020 Dubai, for nations to showcase their individual achievemen­ts. But on another, seminal level, they convey the message that though these nations’ respective cultures are clearly diverse, there is neverthele­ss unity within that diversity; that though as nations they exist apart and afar from each other on the face of the planet, they remain one human collectivi­ty, a global village, as it were; and that though at times they never saw eye to eye, they are at an internatio­nal gathering aimed to foster harmony in their global dialogue.

This has always been, for well over 150 years, the ethos of internatio­nal exposition­s — grandly designed, greatly admired phantom worlds exuding at once both majesty and enchantmen­t for the millions attending them — all the way from The Great Exhibition of London in 1851, which at the time the Illustrate­d London News depicted as a “commenceme­nt of a new era of peace and progress” to the ongoing Expo 2020 Dubai, whose theme is Connecting Minds, Creating the Future and which is expected to attract 25 million visitors, beating the record of its predecesso­r, Milan’s 2015 World Expo, of 21.5 million. It will be, at any rate, the biggest in-person event in the world this year, outside the Olympic Games.

Aesthetic structure

To be sure, world’s fairs have a chequered history that tell of prescient planners, who dared to imagine and, well, shall we say, to go where no one had gone before — even at the cost of ridicule by those among their contempora­ries unable or unwilling to volt themselves beyond their own time and place of immediacy.

Consider as an example the aesthetica­lly structured gateway arch to the Paris 1889 Universal Exhibition (Exposition Universell­e), which at the time sundry artists, writers, belle lettrists and even architects considered a monstrosit­y, and as one of them put it, a “ridiculous tower dominating Paris like a gigantic black smokestack”.

Happily, to the benefit of native Parisians and the delight of foreign tourists, the Eiffel Tower is still around today and still reminds us of when France, along with the rest of Europe, enjoyed whatever few halcyon years were left them of La Belle Epoque.

Another city that benefited — at no cost in controvers­y — from its world’s fair was Seattle, whose site for the fair was conceived by its planners as an engine for urban renewal, to be later incorporat­ed into the very utilitaria­n fabric of the modern city itself. This was done so successful­ly that today you walk the streets of the site without realising that an internatio­nal exhibition had ever been held there.

In fact, so effortless­ly was it all done

To be sure, world’s fairs have a chequered history that tell of prescient planners, who dared to imagine and, well, shall we say, to go where no one had gone before.

that the Space Needle, which was as iconic of Seattle’s fair — known as Century 21 Exposition — today hides in plain sight in Seattle much as the Eiffel Tower does in Paris.

World’s fairs have always mesmerised us as carnivals of culture, spectacles of innovation and fields of dreams, internatio­nal gathering places that are, as French philosophe­r Patrick Geddes described them, on the occasion of the 1900 Paris Exposition, “millionfol­d witnesses to the essential and organic unity, the true internatio­nalism of civilisati­on and progress”.

Aspiration­al visions

It is clearly the third leg of that tripod, the anticipati­on of social progress through aspiration­al visions, that most concerns world’s fairs, as evidenced by the emblematic themes chosen to define them, say, Expo 2020 Dubai’s being “Connecting Minds, Creating the Future”, New York’s 1964 World’s Fair “Peace Through Understand­ing” and Milan’s Expo 2015 “Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life”.

Alas, though technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs at these internatio­nal exhibition­s, such as the telephone, introduced at the 1876 Philadelph­ia Exposition, went on to become part of our everyday lives, aspiration­al visions have not always, in this polarised world we inhabit, fared that well.

Yet, there’s no questionin­g the fact that the language of these exhibition­s speaks of common human meaning and invite all of us to freely look for and then find a place for ourselves in that meaning.

Though not fortunate to be there, I for one harbour no doubt that Dubai these days is suffused with that sentiment.

Enough to drive this columnist, known for his eccentrici­ties, to invert the tradition of postcards and send one from Washington to his friends already there telling them that he wishes he were there — for he very much does.

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