Dubai Telegraph - Journey to the center of the world (Hint: it's in California)

EUR -
AED 4.315061
AFN 77.724052
ALL 96.430624
AMD 448.409899
ANG 2.103659
AOA 1077.442142
ARS 1689.86317
AUD 1.771311
AWG 2.117872
AZN 2.000409
BAM 1.955407
BBD 2.365825
BDT 143.551156
BGN 1.955723
BHD 0.442954
BIF 3469.888012
BMD 1.174964
BND 1.514389
BOB 8.146363
BRL 6.363838
BSD 1.174664
BTN 106.549193
BWP 15.513883
BYN 3.43521
BYR 23029.292606
BZD 2.362425
CAD 1.618037
CDF 2643.668428
CHF 0.935862
CLF 0.027385
CLP 1074.304613
CNY 8.280264
CNH 8.270365
COP 4486.012203
CRC 587.581934
CUC 1.174964
CUP 31.136544
CVE 110.242848
CZK 24.334798
DJF 209.177969
DKK 7.469862
DOP 74.615007
DZD 152.355249
EGP 55.786091
ERN 17.624459
ETB 182.824164
FJD 2.707411
FKP 0.878162
GBP 0.87939
GEL 3.166584
GGP 0.878162
GHS 13.508286
GIP 0.878162
GMD 86.356626
GNF 10214.903998
GTQ 8.998192
GYD 245.75062
HKD 9.139045
HNL 30.940783
HRK 7.533746
HTG 153.908419
HUF 384.767195
IDR 19613.555028
ILS 3.788072
IMP 0.878162
INR 107.0163
IQD 1538.79735
IRR 49477.729809
ISK 148.209797
JEP 0.878162
JMD 187.72228
JOD 0.83304
JPY 181.945504
KES 151.570389
KGS 102.7508
KHR 4700.035597
KMF 493.48453
KPW 1057.467812
KRW 1734.02351
KWD 0.360476
KYD 0.978907
KZT 605.860839
LAK 25453.88542
LBP 105208.716305
LKR 363.207019
LRD 207.354807
LSL 19.70844
LTL 3.469363
LVL 0.710724
LYD 6.367721
MAD 10.782034
MDL 19.828016
MGA 5235.947914
MKD 61.529756
MMK 2467.149311
MNT 4167.41132
MOP 9.416348
MRU 46.726611
MUR 53.953914
MVR 18.090249
MWK 2036.890717
MXN 21.142242
MYR 4.799753
MZN 75.091164
NAD 19.708524
NGN 1706.364458
NIO 43.231129
NOK 11.939308
NPR 170.456749
NZD 2.033351
OMR 0.451772
PAB 1.174664
PEN 3.955622
PGK 4.991976
PHP 69.151912
PKR 329.196053
PLN 4.220693
PYG 7889.414739
QAR 4.28114
RON 5.092412
RSD 117.375408
RUB 93.410413
RWF 1710.256349
SAR 4.408683
SBD 9.587758
SCR 16.622882
SDG 706.738724
SEK 10.924779
SGD 1.517208
SHP 0.881527
SLE 28.257383
SLL 24638.409984
SOS 670.16534
SRD 45.365159
STD 24319.380662
STN 24.494974
SVC 10.277979
SYP 12993.304299
SZL 19.712039
THB 37.042495
TJS 10.802308
TMT 4.112374
TND 3.43531
TOP 2.829032
TRY 50.181881
TTD 7.972398
TWD 36.98804
TZS 2919.78564
UAH 49.650723
UGX 4184.159255
USD 1.174964
UYU 46.036627
UZS 14211.204945
VES 314.232054
VND 30939.73712
VUV 142.713252
WST 3.265592
XAF 655.825222
XAG 0.018677
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.175399
XCG 2.116984
XDR 0.815636
XOF 655.825222
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.170076
ZAR 19.761072
ZMK 10576.086666
ZMW 27.22253
ZWL 378.337899
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.3

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.0065

    13.56

    -0.05%

  • AZN

    1.7300

    91.56

    +1.89%

  • NGG

    1.1000

    76.03

    +1.45%

  • BCC

    -1.1800

    75.33

    -1.57%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    75.82

    +0.21%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    23.365

    +0.49%

  • BCE

    0.2161

    23.61

    +0.92%

  • GSK

    0.4300

    49.24

    +0.87%

  • BTI

    0.6400

    57.74

    +1.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.4300

    81.6

    +0.53%

  • RELX

    0.7000

    41.08

    +1.7%

  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    14.95

    +2.07%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    12.7

    +0.87%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    35.25

    -0.03%

Journey to the center of the world (Hint: it's in California)
Journey to the center of the world (Hint: it's in California) / Photo: Robyn BECK - AFP

Journey to the center of the world (Hint: it's in California)

Every morning, Jacques-Andre Istel has breakfast in bed at the center of the world.

Text size:

Istel is founder, mayor and postmaster general of Felicity, a stretch of California's Sonora Desert where for nearly four decades he has been building a museum of, y'know... the whole of human history.

"This doesn't exist anywhere else on this planet," the 94-year-old told AFP.

What started in 1986 with two small houses has grown into an amphitheater of Istel's dreams; 2,600 acres (1,052 hectares) where the passage of time is marked by a sundial that uses the arm of God -- as painted by Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel -- to cast its shadow.

Nearby sits a bit of an old staircase that used to be part of the Eiffel Tower, its steps ascending into the void.

The town's post office, which Istel has operated since December 1987, collects and distributes mail for a handful of residents and tourists. The $1 stipend checks sent by the US Treasury every year are uncashed and framed.

Istel was elected mayor of Felicity shortly after it was founded in a three-vote landslide.

The ballots were cast by Istel, his wife Felicia, after whom the town is named, and the invisible dragon that stars in Istel's storybook about the center of the world.

(A supervisor from Imperial County, in which Felicity sits, declared all three ballots valid, noting that a dragon's vote was recognized "for the first and only time in California history".)

- The 'center' of the world -

Visitors to Felicity -- dozens of tourists stop by every day between October and April -- enter between symmetrical houses and are faced with a pyramid.

This is -- officially -- the middle of, well, everything. Honestly. There's paperwork to prove it: Supervisors in Imperial County declared it so.

Istel acknowledges with a twinkle in his eye that he's using a bit of creative license.

"The center of the world can be anywhere," he smiles.

Beyond the pyramid, 723 red granite panels stretch out in thematic branches, exploring history, geography, politics, science, fashion and culture.

Here, a panel tells the story of slavery in the United States; there, one examines the life of Alexander the Great.

One slab deals with the sacrificial rites of the Vikings, while another logs America's eating habits.

- Skydiver -

Istel was born in 1929 into a privileged family in the French capital.

He left the country as the Nazis were preparing to march on Paris, and wound up in the United States.

"I'm here thanks to the Germans," he says.

"My family fought against them for three generations. My father left for England with [Charles] De Gaulle, my brother left the French Army for Canada and enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force and eventually died, and my mother and the rest of us kids came to America."

After a degree in economics, the young Istel went into the family banking business on Wall Street.

But in a seemingly emblematic bit of topsy-turviness, he wound up as a professional skydiver, the kind of career swap disappointment that usually seems to happen the other way around.

Seeking thrills outside of a job he did not really enjoy, he got his pilot's license, and did his first parachute jump.

A trip to Europe introduced him to the then-unnamed activity of skydiving, an idea Istel brought back to the United States, where the company he cofounded helped popularize the idea of recreational skydiving, becoming known in some quarters as the "Father of American skydiving."

Contracts with the military and a roaring civilian business made the firm a success, and provided the nest egg for what later became Felicity.

In a study lined with memories from a very full lifetime -- a diploma from Princeton, pre-war furniture and family photographs -- Istel says his museum is not a legacy for himself, but a gift to all of humanity.

Perhaps it will become a place of pilgrimage for generations to come; or maybe in seismically-active California it will be destroyed in a catastrophic earthquake, he muses.

"The silver lining in that case is that archaeologists of the future will unearth a great find," he says.

And if they never find it? Well, that's just how things work out sometimes.

"Everything is forgotten," he says.

Now well into his tenth decade, Istel shows no sign of slowing down (breakfast in bed is a decades-old custom for him, not a sign of old age). He swims daily and skips jauntily up the 49 steps that lead to the chapel in Felicity.

There is, after all, still so much to do -- almost 200 panels are yet to be carved. And who knows? There's still all that desert space to fill.

The magnitude of the task might keep a lesser man awake at night.

But not Istel.

"I sleep well. But I do think about the next panels," he says.

"At Felicity we don't do things by halves. We do them properly or we don't do them at all."

Y.El-Kaaby--DT