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

EUR -
AED 4.356256
AFN 77.102519
ALL 96.729833
AMD 453.280378
ANG 2.123363
AOA 1087.730931
ARS 1716.407515
AUD 1.703027
AWG 2.138096
AZN 2.01145
BAM 1.957011
BBD 2.40819
BDT 146.110377
BGN 1.992042
BHD 0.449378
BIF 3542.291098
BMD 1.186184
BND 1.514237
BOB 8.262111
BRL 6.235172
BSD 1.19564
BTN 109.797916
BWP 15.644677
BYN 3.405506
BYR 23249.200887
BZD 2.404687
CAD 1.615618
CDF 2686.705937
CHF 0.916565
CLF 0.026028
CLP 1027.744898
CNY 8.246052
CNH 8.251497
COP 4352.992561
CRC 592.066225
CUC 1.186184
CUP 31.433869
CVE 110.333247
CZK 24.330941
DJF 212.911697
DKK 7.467917
DOP 75.276563
DZD 154.566608
EGP 55.909475
ERN 17.792756
ETB 185.73929
FJD 2.61512
FKP 0.866428
GBP 0.866359
GEL 3.196822
GGP 0.866428
GHS 13.098102
GIP 0.866428
GMD 86.591171
GNF 10491.489553
GTQ 9.170673
GYD 250.144728
HKD 9.263715
HNL 31.558521
HRK 7.534519
HTG 156.476789
HUF 381.053191
IDR 19896.452606
ILS 3.665789
IMP 0.866428
INR 108.766523
IQD 1566.368884
IRR 49967.989338
ISK 145.081737
JEP 0.866428
JMD 187.365896
JOD 0.841039
JPY 183.859615
KES 154.365483
KGS 103.731752
KHR 4807.973992
KMF 492.265869
KPW 1067.565349
KRW 1720.932795
KWD 0.364064
KYD 0.996416
KZT 601.341962
LAK 25730.915962
LBP 107070.628969
LKR 369.758716
LRD 215.513307
LSL 18.984543
LTL 3.502492
LVL 0.71751
LYD 7.502641
MAD 10.845709
MDL 20.110439
MGA 5343.305123
MKD 61.678151
MMK 2491.375458
MNT 4230.383521
MOP 9.614947
MRU 47.706509
MUR 53.888177
MVR 18.338709
MWK 2073.282437
MXN 20.709403
MYR 4.675926
MZN 75.630943
NAD 18.984543
NGN 1644.620269
NIO 43.997215
NOK 11.444004
NPR 175.676666
NZD 1.96843
OMR 0.458323
PAB 1.19564
PEN 3.997573
PGK 5.118166
PHP 69.884035
PKR 334.513515
PLN 4.213639
PYG 8008.953971
QAR 4.359296
RON 5.100467
RSD 117.472663
RUB 90.549444
RWF 1744.479055
SAR 4.450194
SBD 9.550693
SCR 17.214648
SDG 713.492182
SEK 10.570575
SGD 1.508244
SHP 0.889945
SLE 28.853899
SLL 24873.67862
SOS 683.322672
SRD 45.134883
STD 24551.608082
STN 24.515164
SVC 10.461471
SYP 13118.687676
SZL 18.978739
THB 37.242691
TJS 11.161404
TMT 4.151643
TND 3.435325
TOP 2.856045
TRY 51.596109
TTD 8.118021
TWD 37.48105
TZS 3078.804407
UAH 51.245698
UGX 4274.644098
USD 1.186184
UYU 46.3987
UZS 14617.04143
VES 410.350069
VND 30769.605664
VUV 140.90849
WST 3.215484
XAF 656.362996
XAG 0.014208
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.205721
XCG 2.154833
XDR 0.816305
XOF 656.362996
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.697194
ZAR 19.196652
ZMK 10677.081704
ZMW 23.464514
ZWL 381.950673
  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.65

    -0.41%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.76

    +0.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    92.77

    +0.19%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    60.68

    +0.76%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    91.03

    -4.5%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    35.8

    -1.03%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.86

    +1.43%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    85.27

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    51.6

    +1.82%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.05

    -0.17%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    80.81

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.08

    +1.07%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    37.88

    -0.42%

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."

A.P.Huber--NZN