MAGICAL SCIENCE: In the introductory movie "1001 Inventions and the Library of Secrets," three students are to study the impact of the Dark Ages on the modern world. Sir Ben Kingsley, in the main role as ingenious inventor, opens a magic chapter of science's history.(Courtesy of New York Hall of Science)
By Cornelia Ritter
Created: Mar 23, 2011
Last Updated: Mar 24, 2011
Courtesy Of "The Epoch Times"
NEW YORK—Seven learning stations and an introductory movie—starring Sir Ben Kingsley—draw visitors of all ages into the exhibit “1001 Inventions,” currently at the New York Hall of Science (NYSCI). The title alludes to the Arab collection ofstories One Thousand and One Nights for the exhibit tells the stories of numerous inventors in the Muslim world who lived in the 7th to the 17th centuries.
“To add a nice flavor to the exhibit,” said Kevin Gonzalez, one of the tour guides or "explainers" at the NYSCI, “The explainers are each dressed as one of the inventors.” Gonzalez wears a brown robe and a cloth around his head to represent Moses Maimonides (1135–1204), a famous doctor and philosopher.
Mary Record, director of communications at the NYSCI, calls the exhibit “a ‘wow’ experience for people.”
Science appears as magic in the introductory movie. The learning stations, however, show that the entire exhibit is based on the Golden Age of Muslim civilization. The inventors were men and women of different faiths, originating from Morocco in the west to as far as China in the east, from Bosnia in the north to Mali in the south.
For his role as an explainer, Gonzalez had to become familiar with the exhibit and know the historical facts and scientific principles involved. His job is “to communicate this in conversations with the visitors,” Gonzalez said.
In the 7th to 17th centuries, some Muslim scholars were looking for order and logic in the world and became astronomers, philosophers, or physicists. Others wanted to improve people’s quality of life and became surgeons, cartographers, architects, or inventors of ingenious mechanical devices. Seven learning stations givecredit to the Muslim foundations of our modern world.
Gonzalez tells the visitors that his name is Moses Maimonides and that he lived as a Jewish doctor in a Muslim world. “One thing that we learned in the Muslim world is that everyone received the same kind of [medical] treatment. It was free treatment for everyone,” Gonzalez said.
Besides Maimonides, the visitor gets to know various other scholars. When three students are sent to the library to study “the impact the Dark Ages had on the modern world,” Ben Kingsley magically turns into Al-Jazari, a Turkish inventor, and displays figures from the Muslim Golden Age: Ibn Al-Haytham (965–ca. 1040), who studied the eye and invented the first camera; Abbas Ibn Firnas (810–887), who is said to have made an attempt to fly using wings (he broke both legs because he had forgotten to construct a tail); and the female astrolabe-maker Al-Ijliya (944–967), who lived in Syria.
“A lot of the things that we take for granted now [and] that we accept as fact now had [their] foundations in the Muslim world," Gonzalez said. "In the age which they call the Dark Ages it wasn’t so in the Muslim world.”
The Emblem Of The Exhibit
LEARNING STATIONS: Visitors at the "1001 Inventions" exhibit can make phone calls to inventors from the Muslim Golden Age. A docent dressed as Al-Jazari, an ingenious inventor from southern Turkey, talks about his life and his inventions 800 years ago. (Courtesy of New York Hall of Science)
“It is ingenious the way he did it," Gonzalez said, comparing the elephant clock to simple time devices such as hourglasses. "This one was timed by water; how long it actually takes to flood a little container inside [the elephant] that will pull down a system of pulleys that we don’t even see.”
According to the explanatory information at the exhibit, the decor on the elephant clock was a celebration of "the diversity of humankind” at the time—the elephant represents India, a phoenix relates to Egypt, two dragons are inspired by Chinese culture, and the figurines wear Arab dresses. One of the amazed students in the introductory movie calls it a “United Nation[s] clock."
In his role as Moses Maimonides, Gonzalez said of the bygone era: “There was actually a lot of harmony back then." But Europe was in a state of turmoil. Maimonides and others had to leave Spain because of the Spanish inquisition. “It would get very difficult for Jews and any kind of person that was not Christian back then. But the Muslim civilization embraced you, would give you the best kind of jobs, the best kind of treatment possible.”
Among the scholars portrayed are Al-Jahiz (781–ca. 868), a “writer and scientist of African descent, born in Basra, an Iraqi port town," and Zheng He (1371–1435), a Muslim Chinese from Beijing, who “built the largest wooden vessels that ever sailed.” The vessels were “five times bigger than those of Columbus, who sailed decades later,” according to the learning stations’ explanations.
Even though the exhibit is based in history, is peppered by religious themes, and is featured in a science museum, one can see the deep sense of culture that permeates through each piece. It reminds viewers that science is not created in a vacuum but rather through the activity of cultural exchange. The exhibit itself is a testament to the power of sharing knowledge.
Studying As Precious Gift
RECONSTRUCTED: The emblem of the exhibit is the so-called elephant clock, designed by the Turkish inventor Al-Jazari. Every half hour a ball is released to turn a disc, displaying the time. One of the dragons rotates down and drops the ball, which triggers the internal mechanism to start measuring the next half hour. (Courtesy of New York Hall of Science)
Visitors get to know Fatima Al-Fihri (?–880), who “inherited a fortune” and spent it “building a mosque and college complex,” known today as the world’s oldest university. She lived in Fez, Morocco, and tells the visitors in a short video display: “For learning is a gift to be cherished indeed.”
Intended to “provide role models that will inspire generations of young people of many backgrounds,” the exhibit inspires visitors as well as staff. Gonzalez said, “Every single day I work here, I still find something else that fascinates me.”
When asked what makes the exhibitprecious, Margaret Honey, president and CEO of the NYSCI, said: “’1001 Inventions’ helps us understand the human aspect of science and helps us to identify with the scientists. For instance, young girls can connect with and take pride in the story of Fatima al-Fihri, who founded the world’s first modern university.” Honey added that the NYSCI has seen an increase of about 25% in general admission attendance since ‘1001 Inventions’ opened in December, with a good percentage of them being first-time visitors.
From the 9th to the 13th centuries, “The House of Wisdom,” the greatestcollection of knowledge at that time, was built in Baghdad, Iraq. Books were paid for with gold. When asked what she learned from the exhibit, Record from the NYSCI said, “I didn’t know that story about how they had libraries and paid people towrite books or transcribe books, and they paid for those books in the weight of gold!”
“Everyone loves the exhibit,” Gonzalez said. “We especially get a lot of people that come in from Muslim schools [and] religious schools.” He said some of them feel recognized “when they see where they are coming from, how their origins are being accepted here in the West. It is very nice to watch.”
The exhibit is at the NYSCI, 47-01 111th St., Queens, N.Y., through April 24. It then goes to the California Science Center, L.A. A book titled “1001 Inventions: Muslim Heritage in Our World” by Salim T.S. Al-Hassani is available.
NOTE: The following video was not part of the above article.
1001 Inventions - Discover The Muslim Heritage In Our World
I would love to see this exhibition travel the world. As I live in Australia, I would so much love to see it.
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