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80 moments that

shaped the world

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www.britishcouncil.org
Foreword

I would like to thank the British Council for inviting me to be involved


with this project to mark its 80th anniversary. I’ve been involved with
the organisation for many years, both in South Africa and across the
world; I respect its commitment to building trusting relationships
between peoples of the world by sharing culture and education.

I said this when I delivered the British cruel. But democracy gave hope to
Council Annual Lecture in London to South Africa, and sent a message to
mark its 75th anniversary. the world that men and women working
together can reshape the world they
It is of course impossible to choose just
live in peacefully, and with forgiveness.
one moment out of the last 80 years
that has shaped our world more than This publication will be a fascinating
any other. But I know that this year, for read – and the more so for the diversity
the fifth time, I was proud to see long of views. I look forward to seeing the
lines of eager people, of all races and opinions and perspectives of others on
colours and creeds, gathering across the things that have shaped their world.
South Africa to do something that will Cultural and educational organisations
once again shape my country. They like the British Council are at their very
voted. Twenty years ago, when we best when they stay open and reach
had the first free and fair democratic out to make connections in places of Archbishop Emeritus
elections in South Africa the world conflict, turbulence and discord. It can Desmond Tutu
watched as the Rainbow Nation was be difficult, but it is right that the British
born, and democracy dispatched the Council is for engagement and against
terrible injustices of Apartheid. As I isolation, no act is unforgivable; no
have written elsewhere, a human life person or country is beyond redemption
is a great mixture of goodness, beauty, and the world needs more people to
cruelty, heartbreak, indifference, love reach out to one another. I wish the
and so much more. All of us share the British Council every success and look
core qualities of our human nature and forward to toasting its centenary three
so sometimes we are generous and short years after my own!
sometimes selfish. Sometimes we are
thoughtful and other times thoughtless;
sometimes we are kind and sometimes

2
Introduction

In Our Time
This report has been produced by the British Council to mark our 80th
anniversary. We hope that it will stimulate discussion in the UK, and the
many countries in which we work, about the events and the people who
have helped shape our world in the past 80 years; and about our shared
hopes and aspirations for the future.

In 1934, the world was facing a time of for the England football team, beginning and politics, society and human rights.
immense change. The traumatic effects a record 23-year international career, From their nominations we drew up
of the Great Depression continued to and Alan Bennett, Judi Dench, Eileen a long-list and asked members of the
be felt in many countries around the Atkins and Maggie Smith were born. public – 1,000 people in each of ten
globe. In the United States, Franklin D countries (Brazil, China, Egypt, Germany,
In the same year the British Committee
Roosevelt had introduced the ‘New India, Japan, Russia, South Africa, UK,
for Relations with Other Countries was
Deal’ to combat the economic and USA) – to vote on which they thought
established, shortly to become the
social devastation it had caused. Parts were the most significant. The result,
British Council. Its purpose was to help
of the UK, particularly South Wales and presented in this publication, is merely
counter the anti-British propaganda
the North of England, continued to a snapshot of a period in our time.
being generated in the eastern
experience mass unemployment. We hope, though, it will provide an
Mediterranean, the Middle East and
Authoritarian regimes were emerging insight not only into how our world has
Latin America, and to spread and
in several countries in Europe and developed, and some of the subtle or
strengthen the UK’s international
South America. Further afield, Mahatma radical ways in which it continues to
influence through the development
Gandhi was leading the movement change, but also an understanding
of cultural relations.
for Indian independence, and in China of how the world sees the world. We
the ruling Kuomintang and the rebel This publication describes some of hope that it will prompt discussions
Communist Party were fighting a the most significant events that have in workplaces, in coffee shops, around
protracted civil war for control of happened since we were founded in dinner tables and on social media,
the country. 1934. We are fortunate to have had a between people from different
panel of eminent people from around communities and countries, about
Adolf Hitler united the chancellorship
the world – leaders in their field, in what has shaped the world we share
and presidency of Germany under
science, the arts, politics and business and about our common challenges
the new title of Führer. He and Benito
– to help us, by proposing the individuals, for the future.
Mussolini met for the first time, at the
events, trends and inventions that they
Venice Biennale. The British politician
felt have had a significant impact on
Arthur Henderson was awarded the
today’s world. We asked them to put
Nobel Peace Prize, in recognition of his
forward three nominations in each of
efforts to bring about enduring peace
three categories: arts, culture and sport;
against a backdrop of growing German
education, science and technology;
and Japanese militarism.

In the UK, Dylan Thomas published his


first collection, 18 Poems, including
‘The Force that Through the Green Fuse
Drives the Flower’. The composers
Edward Elgar, Gustav Holst and Frederick
Delius died within three months of each
other. Stanley Matthews made his debut

80 moments that shaped the world  3


1. The invention of the
world wide web
It took broadcast radio 38 years to reach By October 1990, Berners-Lee had on our tables to curing cancer. Most
the first 50 million users. Television took specified the three fundamental of its history is ahead of us, but already
13 years. The web got there in four. technologies that remain the foundation it has changed forever the shape of
It is the fastest-growing communication of today’s web: modern life.
medium of all time. • HTML: HyperText Markup Language, Yet it is far from reaching its full potential.
Twenty-five years ago in March 1989, the publishing format for the New technologies will enable billions
Tim Berners-Lee, a British software web, including the ability to format more (mostly in the developing world)
engineer working at the European documents and link to other to join the web community. But once
Particle Physics Laboratory (CERN), documents and resources. connected, what people are able to
wrote a paper proposing an ‘information • URI: Uniform Resource Identifier – do on and with the web is increasingly
management’ system that became the an ‘address’ that is unique to each monitored and controlled by
conceptual and architectural structure resource on the web (also URL). governments and by certain commercial
for the world wide web. Many scientists • HTTP: Hypertext Transfer Protocol, practices. The ability of the private
participated in experiments at CERN which allows the retrieval of linked sector to filter and sell its customers’
for extended periods of time before resources from across the web. data, and the balance between the
returning to their laboratories around right to digital privacy and the need
the world. They were eager to By 1991, people outside CERN were to protect individuals – particularly
exchange data and results, but had able to join the new web community children – are becoming the defining
difficulties doing so. Berners-Lee he had created, and in April 1993 CERN arguments of our age.
understood this need, and recognised announced that the world wide web
technology would be available for ‘Our success will be measured by how
the unrealised potential of millions of
anyone to use on a royalty-free basis. well we foster the creativity of our
computers connected together through
children’, says Berners-Lee. ‘Whether
the internet. Since that time, the web has changed future scientists have the tools to cure
the way we teach and learn, buy and diseases. Whether people, in developed
Intern sell, inform and are informed, agree and and developing economies alike, can
et
in Kath cafés on th disagree, build communities, exchange
mand e
u, Nep streets of distinguish reliable information from
al T ham
el ideas, share and collaborate, and tackle propaganda or commercial chaff.
problems ranging from putting food Whether the next generation will build
systems that support democracy and
promote accountable debate.’

Berners-Lee designed the web. He let it


loose on the world. And he, more than
anyone else, has fought to keep it open,
non-proprietary, and free. His vision is
a world in which all people can use the
web to communicate, collaborate and
innovate freely, building bridges across
the divides that threaten our shared
future. The fear is that those who seek
to profit from his vision may ultimately
corrupt it.
Penicillin spec
imen c.1950

2. The discovery of a method


to mass produce penicillin
In 1929 Alexander Fleming, a over the UK, and work began on 1940, to US$20 per dose in July 1943,
bacteriologist at St Mary’s Hospital how to grow the mould efficiently to to US$0.55 per dose by 1946.
in London, published a paper on a make penicillin in the large quantities
The introduction of penicillin began
chemical he called ‘penicillin’, which he that would be needed for many
the era of antibiotics, and has been
had isolated from the mould Penicillium thousands of wounded soldiers after
recognised as one of the greatest
notatum. Penicillin, he wrote, had the Normandy landings. The scientists
advances in therapeutic medicine.
prevented the growth of a neighbouring knew they were in a race against death,
Fleming, Florey and Chain shared
colony of germs in the same petri dish. because an infection was as likely to
the 1945 Nobel Prize for medicine
kill a wounded soldier as the wound
In 1938, Howard Florey, Ernst Chain and for their work on it. But antibiotics are
itself. The co-operative efforts of
their colleagues at Oxford University not a universal panacea. Over-use or
British and American chemists,
turned it from a laboratory curiosity inappropriate use (for example, against
chemical engineers, microbiologists,
into a life-saving drug. They expanded viral infection) has led to significant
mycologists, government agencies,
on Fleming’s work and developed growth in antibiotic resistance and the
and chemical and pharmaceutical
methods for isolating, growing, extracting spread of multidrug-resistant bacterial
manufacturers were equal to the
and purifying enough penicillin to prove infections such as MRSA. Developing a
challenge, and as production was
its therapeutic value. The main research new generation of antibiotics is a major
increased, the cost dropped from
effort was moved to the United States challenge for scientists today.
being prohibitively expensive in
in 1941 to protect it from air raids

3. home computers
In 1975, two computer enthusiasts, success they enjoyed convinced many architecture meant that others such as
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, founded others of the feasibility of this approach. Compaq could copy its design and take
a company called Apple Computer. What advantage of the huge demand that
One of these was IBM, the most dominant
distinguished them from others was their had been created.
firm in the computer industry at that time.
determination to make a ‘microcomputer’
They moved with remarkable speed, and The company that benefited the most
– a scaled-down version of a mainframe
did a deal with Bill Gates of the fledgling was Microsoft. Almost every model of
computer, a consumer product aimed at
company Microsoft to run their machines the IBM PC and its clones were supplied
households and non-expert individuals:
on what became the MS-DOS operating with its MS-DOS operating system. As
the home computer. They packaged
system. The IBM personal computer hundreds of thousands and eventually
the product as a self-contained unit in
became an instant and runaway success, millions of machines were sold, money
a plastic case, which could be plugged
driven by IBM’s brand name and poured into Microsoft. This allowed
into a standard wall socket just like any
extraordinary marketing effort. While Microsoft to diversify into computer
other appliance. It would incorporate
many business users had hesitated application software without having to
a keyboard to enter data, a screen
over buying an Apple or another relatively rely on external venture capital, and
to view the output and some form of
unknown brand at that time, the presence to cross-subsidise some of the software
storage to hold data and programs.
of the IBM logo – the most venerated that did not initially succeed: including,
It would also need software, in order to
brand in the industry – convinced them for example, a word-processing package
appeal to anyone other than a computer
that this technology was for real. IBM called Word. When it was released it had
enthusiast. Apple I came out in 1975,
legitimised the personal computer, and a negligible impact on the market, but
followed by Apple II in 1977. In 1979
it became an industry standard. IBM’s the cash flow from MS-DOS allowed
they added spreadsheet and word-
decision to allow it to have an open Microsoft to continue to market Word
processing software, and the early

80 moments that shaped the world  5


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at a loss until the opportunity came after his favourite apple. It was the survived the early death in 2011 of the
later to bundle it properly with first mass-market personal computer charismatic Steve Jobs and continues
its new generation of operating to feature an integral graphical user to wield four competitive strengths:
systems, Windows. interface (what we know as icons) extraordinarily good hardware, an
and a mouse. efficient supply chain, compelling
Despite the enormous sales which
marketing, and strong partnerships
IBM and others enjoyed, a major Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft,
with content and app suppliers.
deficiency of MS-DOS was its lack is now one of the wealthiest people
of user-friendliness, preventing PCs from in the world (he and his wife intend to And as the home computer evolves
being truly acceptable as a consumer eventually donate 95 per cent of their into laptops, tablets and smartphones,
product. In 1984, Apple, which had wealth to charity). IBM sold its personal and the internet fuses with mobile
triggered the boom which others had computer business in 2005 to telephony, we the consumer continue
then capitalised on, burst back into the concentrate on technology services, to embrace its possibilities: e-commerce
market when it introduced its Macintosh including cloud computing and mobile is now the fastest growing retail market
model – named by one of its designers technology. Apple has seemingly in Europe.

4. The Universal Declaration


of Human Rights
The Universal Declaration of Human The Declaration consists of 30 articles based on race, colour, sex, language,
Rights (UDHR) was adopted by the which have been elaborated in religion, opinion, origin, property, birth
United Nations General Assembly subsequent international treaties, regional or residency.
in December 1948 at the Palais de human rights instruments, national
The seven paragraphs of the preamble
Chaillot, Paris. The Declaration arose constitutions, and other laws. It has been
– setting out the reasons for the
directly from the horrors of the Second translated into more than 300 languages
Declaration – represent the steps.
World War and the Holocaust and and dialects, from Abkhaz to Zulu.
The main body of the Declaration
represents the first global expression
The French jurist René Cassin, who forms the four columns. The first column
of rights to which all human beings are
was closely involved in drafting the constitutes rights of the individual such
inherently entitled. It built on the
Declaration, compared it to the portico as the right to life and the prohibition of
‘Four Freedoms’ – freedom of speech,
of a Greek temple, with a foundation, slavery. The second column constitutes
freedom of religion, freedom from fear,
steps, four columns, and a pediment. the rights of the individual in civil and
and freedom from want – adopted by
political society. The third column is
the Allies as their basic war aims, and Articles 1 and 2 are the foundation
concerned with spiritual, public, and
was described by Pope John Paul II blocks: all human beings are free and
political freedoms such as freedom of
as ‘one of the highest expressions of equal in dignity and rights; and all are
association, thought, conscience, and
the human conscience of our time’. entitled to rights without distinction

6
religion. The fourth column sets out everyone has duties to the community; constitutions since 1948. It has also
social, economic, and cultural rights. and none of the human rights in served as the foundation for a growing
the Declaration can be used to justify number of national laws, international
The final three articles of the Declaration
violating another human right. laws and treaties, and is a powerful
provide the pediment which binds the
tool in applying diplomatic and moral
structure together: everyone is entitled Though not legally binding, the
pressure to governments that violate
to a social and international order in Declaration has been adopted
any of its articles.
which these rights can be realised fully; in, or has influenced, most national

5. The terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001,


and the emergence of INTERNATIONAL terrorism
After several years of detailed planning, or interpretation, given by an Islamic are free ... and want to regain freedom
four passenger planes were hijacked scholar) which referred to the US military for our nation. As you undermine our
in September 2011 by members of the presence in the Arabian Peninsula, the security we undermine yours.’
terrorist group al-Qaeda, to be flown into blockade of Iraq, and American support
Close to 3,000 people died in the 9/11
major buildings in co-ordinated suicide for Israel. It purported to provide religious
attacks, including several hundred who
attacks against the United States. authorisation for indiscriminate killing
were killed at street level in New York
of Americans and Jews everywhere.
Two were flown into the North and South by burning debris. The world watched,
Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the
towers of the World Trade Center appalled and horrified, as some of the
bombing later that year of US embassies
complex in New York City. Within two most iconic moments of recent times
in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi.
hours, both towers collapsed completely; unfolded on its television screens.
others around it were partially or In a ‘Letter to America’ published two
The United States responded to the
wholly destroyed. A third plane was months after the 9/11 attacks, bin
attacks by launching the ‘War on Terror’,
crashed into the Pentagon building Laden stated explicitly that al-Qaeda
and by invading Afghanistan to depose
in Washington DC. The fourth, United was motivated by the presence of US
the Taliban, which had harboured
Airlines Flight 93, was also targeted troops in Saudi Arabia, the sanctions
al-Qaeda. (Those they fought were
at Washington. It crashed into a field against Iraq, and US support of, variously,
often fighters they had trained in
in Pennsylvania after its passengers Israel, Russian ‘atrocities against Muslims’
the battle against Russian forces
attempted to overcome the hijackers. in Chechnya, authoritarian regimes
in Afghanistan in the 1980s.) Many
in the Middle East such as Egypt, Saudi
The al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden countries considerably strengthened
Arabia and Jordan, Indian ‘oppression
initially denied any involvement. ‘I stress their anti-terrorism legislation and
against Muslims’ in Kashmir, and ‘attacks
that I have not carried out this act which law enforcement powers. Words
against Muslims’ in Somalia. In 2004,
appears to have been carried out by and phrases such as Guantanamo,
bin Laden publicly acknowledged his
individuals with their own motivation’, waterboarding, forced rendition,
direct link to the 9/11 attacks which,
he stated. In 1998 bin Laden had jihadist electronic surveillance, began
he said, were carried out because ‘we
co-signed a fatwā (usually an opinion, to enter our everyday vocabulary.

80 moments that shaped the world  7


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6. The rise in global awareness


of environmental protection
and conservation
On 22 April 1970, 20 million Americans Meanwhile, the Intergovernmental Panel all the nations of the world. Despite
took to the streets and parks in organised on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded in near collapse of negotiations at each
protests against the deterioration of 1990 that it is likely that carbon dioxide, of the last four annual conferences,
the environment. Groups that had been emitted by the burning of fossil fuels, no country is willing to abandon the
fighting against oil spills, polluting was raising global temperatures. In 2001, goal of such an international regime.
factories and power plants, raw sewage, it reported new and stronger evidence Consensus and positive action is slow
toxic dumps, pesticides, the loss that humanity’s emissions of greenhouse in coming although in November 2014
of wilderness, and the extinction of gases were causing global warming. the leaders of China and the US
wildlife suddenly realised they shared In 2007 it reported that it is more announced an agreement to work
common values. than 90 per cent likely that manmade towards a reduction of their greenhouse
emissions of greenhouse gases are gas output.
Earth Day achieved a rare political
changing the climate. In 2013 it said
alignment, and led to the creation Archbishop Desmond Tutu is one of
that scientists are 95 per cent certain
of the US Environmental Protection those who has put reticent politicians,
that humans have been the dominant
Agency and the passage of the Clean climate change deniers, well-funded
cause of global warming since the 1950s.
Air, Clean Water, and Endangered oil lobbyists and others on notice. He
In 2014 it addressed the effects of
Species Acts. In 1990 the movement describes the reduction of our carbon
climate change as a series of risks that
went global, mobilising 200 million footprint as ‘not just a technical scientific
will ultimately increase exponentially
people in 141 countries. It lifted necessity; it has also emerged as the
as temperatures warm: any future
environmental and conservation issues human rights challenge of our time …
increase of temperature could lead
onto the world stage and helped pave the most devastating effects of climate
to ‘abrupt and irreversible changes’.
the way for the 1992 UN Earth Summit change – deadly storms, heat waves,
in Rio de Janeiro. Earth Day 2000, In December 2015 the parties to the droughts, rising food prices and the
focusing on global warming and a UN Convention on Climate Change will advent of climate refugees – are being
push for clean energy, involved 5,000 meet in Paris. The overarching goal of visited on the world’s poor. It is a deep
environmental groups in 184 countries the Convention is to reduce greenhouse injustice.’
reaching out to hundreds of millions of gas emissions in order to limit the global
people. It sent world leaders the loud temperature increase to 2°C above
and clear message that citizens around current levels. The objective of the
the world wanted quick and decisive Paris conference is to achieve a legally
action on clean energy. binding and universal agreement, from

7. The influence of Nelson Mandela


Fifty years ago in South Africa, on Nelson Mandela chose to make a it by the writer Nadine Gordimer and
20 April 1964, ten African National speech from the dock. In effect, he put the journalist Anthony Sampson.
Congress (ANC) leaders were put on the state on trial by pointing out the Mandela spoke for three hours, and
trial accused of sabotage, furthering injustices of South African society and concluded with these words:
communism and aiding foreign powers. its legal system. He worked on the
‘During my lifetime I have dedicated my
speech for some weeks before the trial,
Instead of testifying as a witness and life to this struggle of the African people.
and was helped in editing and polishing
submitting to cross-examination, I have fought against white domination,

8
Nels
on M
and
ela

and I have fought against black At many points during the 27 years I knew if I didn’t leave my bitterness
domination. I have cherished the Mandela subsequently spent in prison, and hatred behind, I’d still be in prison.’
ideal of a democratic and free society and in the period following his release
In 1994 he became the first black head
in which all persons will live together in in 1990 at the age of 71, a catastrophic
of state in South African history, as
harmony and with equal opportunities. collapse into violent chaos was a real
well as the first to take office following
It is an ideal which I hope to live for prospect for South Africa. We know
the dismantling of apartheid and the
and to see realised. But, my Lord, if it now, from his memoir Long Walk to
introduction of constitutional democracy.
needs be, it is an ideal for which I am Freedom, that Mandela thought deeply
At his inauguration, he stood hand
prepared to die.’ about how he should act on his release.
on heart, saluted by white generals
He wrote:
These words are now inscribed on as he sang along to two anthems: the
the wall of South Africa’s Constitutional ‘As I walked out the door toward the apartheid-era Afrikaans ‘Die Stem’
Court building in Johannesburg. gate that would lead to my freedom, (‘The Voice’) and the multi-language
‘Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika’ (‘God Bless Africa’).

8. The break-up of the Soviet Union


In December 1991, the Soviet Union perestroika, or rebuilding; and a policy severe social and economic problems
disintegrated into 15 separate countries, of glasnost, or openness: making the which the Soviet government had long
bringing an end to the Cold War and country’s governance more transparent denied and covered up, such as: poor
reformulating political, economic and and open to debate, and introducing housing, food shortages, alcoholism,
military alliances all over the globe. a degree of democracy including widespread pollution, and increasing
elections for the leaders of each Soviet mortality.
When Mikhail Gorbachev came to power
republic. Perestroika introduced some
in 1985, the USSR had deep economic In 1989, pro-democracy revolutions
important and liberalising reforms
and political problems. Economic overthrew the communist regimes
such as decentralisation, but price
planning had failed to meet the needs in the six Warsaw Pact countries of
controls remained, as did the rouble’s
of the State, which was caught up in a Eastern Europe, widely recognised
inconvertibility and most government
relentless and debilitating Cold War as satellite states of the Soviet Union.
controls over the means of production.
arms race with the United States. At the Gorbachev refused to use Soviet
Tax revenues declined because republic
same time, non-Russian ethnic groups military force against these changes.
and local governments withheld them
(more than 50 per cent of the total Internal disintegration began on the
from central government under the
population of the Soviet Union) had peripheries, in the non-Russian areas.
growing spirit of regional autonomy;
a long-standing desire for greater The first to produce mass, organised
and new production bottlenecks were
autonomy or independence from the dissent were the Baltic states,
created, especially in the consumer
centralised Soviet state. incorporated into the Soviet Union
goods sector. At the same time, glasnost
as a result of the Molotov Pact in 1940.
To tackle these issues, Gorbachev was permitting a greater freedom of
They were followed by secessionist
introduced a major set of reforms: speech and a relaxation of censorship.
demands in the Armenian-populated
an economic programme known as Before long, the media began to expose

80 moments that shaped the world  9


autonomous region of Nagorno- tried to bring in the military to quell republics and handed over its attributes
Karabagh, in the Republic of Azerbaijan. the protestors, the soldiers themselves – including control of the Soviet nuclear
Nationalist movements emerged in rebelled, saying that they could not missile launching codes – to the man
Georgia, Ukraine, Moldova, Byelorussia, fire on their fellow citizens. After three who had politically outmanoeuvred
and the Central Asian republics. days of protest, the coup organisers him, Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
In August 1991, in a last-ditch effort surrendered, knowing that without the What followed was a decade of chaotic
to preserve the previous authoritarian co-operation of the military they were privatisation and the rise of the oligarchs:
system, a group of hard-line Communists powerless. well-connected entrepreneurs
organised a coup d’etat and arrested who started from nearly nothing and
On 25 December 1991, Gorbachev
Gorbachev. Massive protests were prospered through their connections
declared his office extinct as the Soviet
staged in Moscow, Leningrad and other to the government.
Union splintered into its constituent
major cities. When the coup organisers

9. The invention of the atomic bomb,


and the explosion of atomic bombs
over Hiroshima and Nagasaki
At breakfast time on 6 August 1945, a US culmination of the most secret wartime cities: on a single night, 9 March 1945,
B-29 aircraft dropped an atomic bomb project in history: the Manhattan Project. an estimated 100,000 people had been
on the Japanese city of Hiroshima, More than 100,000 scientists had been killed in Tokyo and 16 square miles of the
instantly killing around 75,000 people. working on the development of the bomb city devastated. Truman was nevertheless
Three days later, a second bomb since 1942, many of them operating convinced that use of the bomb
was dropped on the city of Nagasaki, in isolation in different parts of the US, represented the best means of forcing
causing the deaths of an estimated unaware of the magnitude of the project a Japanese surrender and ending
40,000 people. The anticipated Japanese in which they were involved. In 1943 the war. The alternative, an Allied
surrender, which came on 15 August – the project was centralised and moved invasion of the Japanese home islands,
six days after the detonation over to an isolated laboratory in Los Alamos was expected to cost hundreds of
Nagasaki – ended the Second World War. in the New Mexico desert. Its only mailing thousands of casualties.
The first western scientists, servicemen address was a post office box, number
The role of the bombings in Japan’s
and journalists to arrive on the scene 1663, in Santa Fe. On 16 July 1945,
surrender and the justification for them
produced vivid and heartrending scientists carried out the first trial of the
has been the subject of debate for
reports describing a charred landscape bomb in Alamagordo, an area of New
decades. The fundamental issue that
populated by hideously burnt people, Mexico that had been inhabited for
has divided scholars and historians
coughing up and urinating blood and 11,000 years.
is whether the use of the bomb was
waiting to die. In the months following,
President Truman received news of necessary to achieve victory in the
it is thought that a further 100,000
the successful test whilst negotiating war in the Pacific. It was the end of the
people did indeed die, slowly, of radiation
the post-war settlement in Europe Second World War, but with a terrible
poisoning.
at the Potsdam Conference. In the human cost.
These bombings, which remain the only previous six months, the US Air Force
nuclear attacks in history, were the had been firebombing 67 Japanese

10
10. The move towards greater equality
for women in many parts of the world
In 1957 Betty Friedan, an American Much water has passed under the bridge Rebeca Grynspan, the Costa Rican
housewife, mother and freelance since then. Legislation, affirmative action economist and former UN Under-
journalist, sent questionnaires to her policies and international conventions Secretary-General, has argued that if
old classmates asking them to describe dealing with gender equality have been only one global development goal was
their lives since leaving college, 15 years critical in bringing about changes in to be adopted from 2015, it should be
earlier. From their answers and other societal attitudes, particularly in the gender equality because empowering
research came her 1963 book developed world. A strike by sewing women has such broad ripple effects.
The Feminine Mystique, an instant machinists at the Ford car factory in Families can prosper, children’s health
best-seller. It was much influenced Dagenham for equal pay and against and education improve and national
by Simone de Beauvoir’s 1949 study sex discrimination ultimately led to the growth expand by investing in women.
The Second Sex, which argued that passing of the Equal Pay Act 1970, the ‘The character of this century will
men fundamentally oppress women first legislation in the United Kingdom be determined by our ability to walk
by characterising them, on every level, aimed at ending pay discrimination towards gender equality’, she says.
as ‘the Other’: he creates, acts, invents; between men and women. Nevertheless, In many countries, however, domestic
she waits for him to save her, said it is argued that jobs traditionally done violence, forced marriage, honour
de Beauvoir. Friedan’s thesis was that by women, such as cleaning, catering killings and female genital mutilation
suburban middle class housewives and caring, continue to be undervalued are still part of the status quo. In the
were not necessarily fulfilled by and paid less than jobs traditionally words of the Egyptian writer and
housewifery and childbearing. She done by men, such as construction, commentator Mona Eltahawy, ‘Until the
criticised psychiatrists, social scientists, transportation and manually skilled rage shifts from the oppressors in our
educators, and businessmen who used trades. Inequalities within power presidential palaces to the oppressors
the ‘mystique’ – the theory that structures such as caste, tribe, language, on our streets and in our homes, our
women’s fulfilment could be found religion, region and class have posed revolution has not even begun.’
only in motherhood and family – to a challenge for women’s rights
encourage women to live segregated campaigners around the world, who
lives in the suburban ghettos of the have acknowledged that fulfilling the
post-war world. The perfect nuclear demands of one group might create
family image depicted and strongly further inequalities for another.
marketed in the mainstream media,
she wrote, did not reflect happiness
eff ects
n has far-reaching
and was in fact degrading for women. Empowering wome
uca tion , hea lth and prosperity
in ed
It created a huge response from unhappy,
dissatisfied women who realised that
Friedan had identified their ‘problem
with no name’, and arguably kick-started
what became known as second-wave
feminism. Germaine Greer, in her 1970
book The Female Eunuch, similarly took
issue with the ‘traditional’ suburban,
consumerist, nuclear family, arguing
that it repressed women sexually
and devitalised them, rendering
them eunuchs.
011
in 2
lu t io n
evo
ia n r
g y pt
th e E
l e in
ant ro
an i mpor t
played
S o cia l m e d ia

11. The spread of English strategies is becoming a necessity 14. The Holocaust in
as a global language for business and governments alike. Nazi-occupied Europe
Emerging from a colourful history, Social media platforms, enabling the The word is derived from the Greek
and thanks to its Darwinian capacity to creation and exchange of user-generated hólos, ‘whole’ and kaustós, ‘burnt’. The
evolve and adapt, English has come of content, have fundamentally changed Holocaust was a genocide in which
age as the global common language. the nature of communication between six million Jews, including a million
Its seemingly irresistible spread, begun organisations, communities, and children, were killed by the Nazi regime
in past centuries but accelerating individuals. They differ from traditional throughout the German Reich and
intensely in recent decades, means or industrial media in many ways, German-occupied territories during the
that different varieties have emerged. including quality, reach, frequency, period 1941–45. This genocide was
It is constantly moulded and altered usability, immediacy, and permanence. part of a broader aggregate of acts of
by new communities of users, whether Building virtual ties among like-minded oppression and killings of various ethnic
geographical or digital. It is now spoken people and with the potential to turn and political groups in Europe by
at a useful level by some 1.75 billion individualised, localised, and community- the Nazis, including Gypsies, Poles,
people worldwide – one person in specific dissent into structured communists, homosexuals, Soviet
every four. By 2020, it is forecast that movements, they can be used to prisoners of war, and the mentally and
two billion people will be using it, or allow individuals to hold leaders physically disabled. In total, approximately
learning to use it. It has come to belong accountable and expose corruption 11 million people were killed.
to all its speakers. It no longer has a single and human rights abuses. They can
27 January, the anniversary of the
centre, such as the UK, which influences connect local and opposition groups
liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau,
its norms of usage, but instead has to the outside world, to other states
the largest Nazi death camp,
many centres and hubs around the world or diaspora populations, supporting
is commemorated worldwide as
which individually and collectively political communication and activism
Holocaust Memorial Day. In Britain,
shape its character. across national borders. They can
the commemoration events are
help build a political identity among
organised by the Holocaust Memorial
12. The growth and influence otherwise indifferent youth, but they
Day Trust, which also honours the
of social media can also inhibit face-to-face human
victims of subsequent genocides in
engagement and allow anonymous
At its launch in 2004, membership Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, and Darfur.
individuals to harass and bully.
of Facebook – arguably the most ‘It is a time when we seek to learn the
mature of the top social networks – was lessons of the past,’ says the Trust,
restricted to Harvard University students. 13. Satellite technology ‘and to recognise that genocide does
and its impact not just take place on its own, it’s a
By 2011 the network had grown so large,
its population was being compared to The world’s first artificial satellite, steady process which can begin if
that of a country. Today, it has more than the Sputnik 1, slightly smaller than a discrimination, racism and hatred are
one billion registered users and has basketball, was launched by the Soviet not checked and prevented. We’re
ambitions to connect five billion people. Union in 1957. Since then, almost fortunate here in the UK; we are not at
By January 2014 the company’s market 7,000 have been launched of which risk of genocide. However, discrimination
capitalisation had risen to over US$134 some 1,000 are currently operational; has not ended, nor has the use of the
billion. With platforms such as Twitter the rest have become part of the debris language of hatred or exclusion. There
(645 million registered users), Google+ of space. They bring us television is still much to do to create a safer
(1.38 billion), Weibo (503 million), pictures; they authorise our credit card future and Holocaust Memorial Day
Instagram (200 million), Badoo (200 purchases; they track hurricanes; they is an opportunity to start this process.’
million) and Renren (210 million), social measure the changing size of glaciers;
media is as ubiquitous as the computer and they tell us where we are when we
itself; and investment in social media are lost.

12
skind
l Libe
d by Da n ie
in, d e signe
in Berl
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T h e J ew
nd
Pola
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Ger

15. The mobile phone 17. Deng Xiaoping and his an agreement outlining their zones
‘open door’ policy of occupation. For the fourth time
The first-ever call on a handheld
in its history, Poland was partitioned
mobile phone was made by a Motorola Following the death of Mao Zedong
by its more powerful neighbours.
employee, Martin Cooper, in April 1973 in 1976, Deng became the core of
Nine months later Hitler attacked the
using a 2kg handset. In 1979, Japan the ‘second generation’ of Chinese
USSR and seized all of Poland. During
became the first country to have a leadership. He is considered the
the German occupation, nearly three
city-wide commercial cellular network. architect of a new brand of socialist
million Polish Jews were killed in the Nazi
By 1993 the first SMS text messages thinking, and led Chinese economic
death camps; the Slavic majority was
were being sent and data services reform through a synthesis of theories
persecuted in an attempt to destroy
were beginning to appear on phone that became known as the ‘socialist
the intelligentsia and Polish culture.
screens. From 1990 to 2011, worldwide market economy’, which included a
Over the six years of war that followed
mobile phone subscriptions grew from variety of reforms aimed at decentralising
the invasion of Poland, an estimated
12.4 million to over six billion, reaching the economy and opening the country
60–85 million people died.
about 87 per cent of the global to foreign investment, the global market
population. The United Nations has and limited private competition. It
reported that mobile phones have spread helped to lift many millions of people 19. The development
faster than any other technology and out of poverty and made possible of nuclear energy
can improve the livelihood of the poorest China’s rise as a modern global power. The pursuit of nuclear energy for
people in developing countries by Deng resigned from his last official electricity generation began soon after
providing access to information in places Party post in 1989 but remained highly the discovery in the early 20th century
where landlines or the internet are influential until his death in 1997. that radioactive elements, such as
not available, especially in the least radium, released immense amounts of
developed countries. 18. The invasion of Poland energy. The discovery of nuclear fission
on 1 September 1939, marking in the late 1930s provided the means to
16. The Human Genome Project the beginning of the Second harness such energy, and in the post-war
World War years there was a drive to develop
The Human Genome Project has been ‘peaceful’ uses of nuclear power. In 1954,
At 4.45 a.m. on 1 September 1939,
one of the great feats of exploration in the USSR’s Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant
some 1.5 million German troops began
history – an inward voyage of discovery became the world’s first nuclear power
crossing into Poland along the length
rather than an outward exploration of the plant to generate electricity for a power
of its 1,750-mile border with German-
planet or the cosmos; an international, grid. Nuclear energy produces virtually
controlled territory. Simultaneously,
collaborative research effort to sequence no conventional air pollution, such as
the German Luftwaffe bombed Polish
and map all of the genes – together greenhouse gases and its use
airfields, and German warships and
known as the genome – of members decreases dependence on imported
U-boats attacked Polish naval forces
of our species, Homo sapiens. It is the energy sources. Its opponents claim
in the Baltic Sea. Britain declared war
world’s largest collaborative biological that it nevertheless poses many threats
after Germany ignored its ultimatum,
project, with co-ordinated work carried to people and the environment, citing the
delivered on 3 September, demanding
out in 20 universities and research disasters of Chernobyl and Fukushima,
the withdrawal of German troops, and
centres in the United States, the UK, and point to the problems of
was swiftly followed by Australia, New
Japan, France, Germany and China. processing, transport and storage of
Zealand, India and France.
Completed in April 2003, the project radioactive nuclear waste, the risk of
has given the world a resource of detailed The Polish army was able to mobilise nuclear weapons proliferation and
information about the structure, one million men but was hopelessly terrorism, and health risks and
organisation and function of the complete outmatched. By 8 September, German environmental damage from uranium
set of approximately 20,500 human forces had reached the outskirts of mining. In 2011, The Economist reported
genes: nature’s complete genetic Warsaw; and on 28 September the that nuclear power ‘looks dangerous,
blueprint for building a human being. Warsaw garrison finally surrendered unpopular, expensive and risky’, and
to a relentless German siege. That day, that ‘it is replaceable with relative ease
Germany and the USSR concluded and could be forgone with no huge

14
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structural shifts in the way the world 21. The discovery of the viable when a team led by Carl Djerassi,
works.’ In 2012, nuclear (fission) double helix structure an Austrian-American chemist, novelist,
power stations were providing about of DNA playwright and social activist, discovered
5.7 per cent of the world’s energy and The sentence ‘This structure has novel in 1951 that the Mexican wild yam
13 per cent of the world’s electricity. features which are of considerable was a cheap natural source of these
biological interest’ may be one of hormones. In the words of The Economist,
it ‘was arguably the first [...] drug to
20. The work and influence science’s most famous understatements.
of Albert Einstein, 1879–1955 It appeared in April 1953 in the scientific control a normal bodily function –
paper where James Watson and Francis fertility – rather than a dread disorder.
Albert Einstein developed the general It transformed the lives of millions and
Crick presented the structure of the
theory of relativity, one of the two helped reshape the role of medicine
DNA helix, the molecule that carries
pillars of modern physics, and was in reproduction.’ Its social impact was
genetic information from one generation
awarded the Nobel Prize in 1921. massive, helping to empower women
to the other. They based their findings
He settled in the United States in the by giving them choice.
on the work of one of their colleagues
1930s, after Hitler’s rise to power in
at King’s College in London – Rosalind
his native Germany, and became an
American citizen in 1940. On the eve of
Franklin, an x-ray diffraction expert 23. Space exploration
whose images of DNA proteins in the
the Second World War, he endorsed a Humans have dreamed about spaceflight
early 1950s revealed a helix shape.
letter to President Franklin D Roosevelt since antiquity, but it was not until after
In 1962, Watson and Crick, with Maurice
alerting him to the potential development the Second World War that rockets
Wilkins, shared the Nobel Prize in
of ‘extremely powerful bombs of a new were developed with sufficient power
Physiology or Medicine for solving one
type’ and recommending that the US to overcome the force of gravity and
of the most important of all biological
began similar research. This eventually reach orbital velocities. Both the Soviet
riddles. Rosalind Franklin had died
led to what would become the Manhattan Union and the United States took
four years earlier and despite her key
Project and the development of the advantage of captured German rocket
experimental work, the prize could not
atomic bomb, but he largely denounced technology and personnel. The Soviet
be awarded posthumously. Her pivotal
the idea of using nuclear fission Union launched the first artificial satellite,
contribution was not acknowledged
as a weapon. Later, with the British Sputnik 1, in October 1957 and with it
for many years. Half a century later,
philosopher Bertrand Russell, Einstein launched the so-called ‘Space Race’,
important new implications of this
signed the Russell–Einstein Manifesto, a public manifestation of the Cold War.
contribution to science are still being
which highlighted the danger of nuclear The first US satellite, Explorer 1, went
recognised, such as the identification
weapons. A year before his death into orbit in January 1958. On 12 April
of the genes that trigger devastating
he said ‘I made one great mistake in 1961, Russian Lt Yuri Gagarin in Vostok 1
diseases or the creation and manufacture
my life – when I signed the letter to became the first human to orbit Earth.
of drugs to treat them.
President Roosevelt recommending His flight lasted 108 minutes, and Gagarin
that atom bombs be made; but there reached an altitude of 327 kilometers
was some justification – the danger 22. The invention of (about 202 miles). Eight years later, US
that the Germans would make them...’ the CONTRACEPTIVE pill astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped from
Einstein was a passionate, committed Access to advice about contraception Apollo 11 onto the surface of the moon
anti-racist. He joined the National was not available to women in most and spoke these famous words to
Association for the Advancement countries until well into the latter half of a live, worldwide television audience:
of Colored People (NAACP) and the 20th century. Before this, individual ‘That’s one small step for a man,
campaigned for the civil rights of campaigners such as Marie Stopes one giant leap for mankind.’
African Americans. He considered (1880–1958) set up birth control clinics
racism America’s ‘worst disease,’ in the face of much opposition. The
seeing it as ‘handed down from contraceptive pill first became available
one generation to the next.’ in 1960. It uses female hormones to
control fertility and became commercially

16
A television an
d radio shop
in southern En
gland, 1955

The Space Race sparked increases before the outbreak of the Second in an electronic envelope and give it
in spending on education and pure World War, which caused it to be an electronic address. A US computer
research, which led to beneficial suspended in September 1939. The engineer, Ray Tomlinson, is credited
spin-off technologies. It also service resumed in June 1946, when with picking the @ symbol from the
contributed to the birth of the 100,000 viewers in the greater London computer keyboard to denote sending
environmental movement by providing area watched a broadcast of the victory messages from one computer to another.
sharp colour images of the Earth taken parade celebrating the end of the war, The first email message, sent over
by astronauts in translunar space. and reached a high point on 2 June the ARPANET network in 1972, was
1953, with the televising of Queen ‘QWERTYUIOP’. Today, email has become
In September 2014, India followed
Elizabeth II’s coronation inside the predominant form of business
Russia, the US and the EU in sending
Westminster Abbey. communication, with over 100 billion
an operational mission to Mars.
emails sent and received each day.
Its Mangalyaan satellite was confirmed
Consumer email traffic, estimated at
to be in orbit around the planet after 25. The development
of nanotechnology 82 billion per day, is predicted to level
a ten-month journey. The cost of
off or decline due to the increased usage
the mission has been estimated at Nanoscience and nanotechnology are of social networking, text messaging
4.5 billion rupees (US$74 million): the study and application of extremely and other forms of communication.
the Indian Prime Minister Narendra small things. The prefix ‘nano’ means
Modi noted that this was less than the one-billionth, and there are 25,400,000
budget for the Hollywood film Gravity. nanometres in one inch. 27. The fall of the Berlin Wall
in 1989 and the reunification
The concepts behind nanoscience of Germany in 1990
24. The first public and nanotechnology were first publicly
television service Between 1949 and 1961, some
explored by the physicist Richard
2.5 million people – many of them
On 2 November 1936 the BBC began Feynman in 1959, when he described
engineers, technicians, doctors, teachers,
transmitting the world’s first public a process in which scientists would
lawyers and skilled workers – fled the
television service, from Alexandra be able to manipulate and control
repressive living conditions in East
Palace in north London. The formal individual atoms and molecules. Over
Germany. This haemorrhage of talent
opening ceremony was followed by a decade later, in his explorations of
threatened to destroy the economic
a Movietone newsreel and then a ultraprecision machining, Professor
viability of the East German state.
variety show, featuring Adele Dixon Norio Taniguchi coined the term
On the night of 12 August 1961, trucks
and the BBC Television Orchestra. nanotechnology. However, it was not
with soldiers and construction workers
A short documentary, Television Comes until 1981, with the development of
rumbled through East Berlin. While
to London, revealed the preparations the scanning tunnelling microscope
most Berliners were sleeping, crews
leading up to the launch. In all, the service that could ‘see’ individual atoms, that
began tearing up streets that entered
was on the air for two hours on its first modern nanotechnology began. The
into West Berlin, dug holes to put up
day. Two competing technical systems, areas of its applications are as varied
concrete posts, and strung barbed
Marconi-EMI’s 405-line system and as food science, water quality and
wire across the border between
Baird’s 240-line intermediate film system, space technology.
East and West Berlin. Over the next
were installed, each with its own 28 years, with the barbed wire replaced
broadcast studio. They transmitted
26. The invention and by concrete slabs, it stood as the great
on alternate weeks until the Marconi widespread use of email physical symbol of the Iron Curtain.
system was chosen in 1937. During
the BBC Television Service’s first three Email had very simple beginnings. East Germany’s hard-line communist
years, the prohibitive cost of television Originally, it was used to send messages leadership was forced from power
sets reportedly limited the number of to other users of the same computer. in October 1989 during the wave of
viewers to 20,000. The service gradually Once computers began to talk to each democratisation that was sweeping
increased viewership, reaching an other over networks, however, users through Eastern Europe. At midnight
estimated 25,000 to 40,000 homes needed to be able to put a message on 9 November 1989, the new

80 moments that shaped the world  17


lin Wall, 1989
Chipping away at the Ber

leadership gave permission for gates armistice in 1949, the Israelis had 30. The US civil
along the Wall to be opened. They extended their territory, leaving Jordan rights movement
were met by jubilant West Berliners with the West Bank, Egypt with Gaza,
The protest against racial segregation
on the other side, and ecstatic crowds and Jerusalem divided. Hundreds
and discrimination in the southern United
immediately began to clamber on top of thousands of Palestinians had fled
States came to national prominence
of the Wall and hack large chunks or had been driven out. 1
during the mid-1950s. It had its roots
out of the 28-mile barrier. Once the
in the centuries-long efforts of African
Wall had been breached, East Germany
29. The influence slaves and their descendants to resist
effectively disintegrated. On 3 October and achievements racial oppression and abolish the
1990 the two countries merged of Mahatma Gandhi institution of slavery.
to form a new united Germany.
MK Gandhi led India to independence It was triggered by the refusal in
and inspired civil rights movements December 1955 of a 42 year old woman,
28. The creation of across the world. He spent 20 years
the state of Israel Rosa Parks, to give up her seat on a
working in South Africa where he saw bus to a white man in Montgomery,
The State of Israel was proclaimed on at first-hand the treatment of Indian Alabama. She was arrested and fined
14 May 1948, the culmination of nearly immigrants, and joined the struggle US$14, but it led to major campaigns
2,000 years of hopes by Jewish people to obtain basic rights for them. He was of civil resistance and acts of nonviolent
that they would one day return to the land imprisoned numerous times but in protest and civil disobedience. In August
from which the Romans had expelled 1914 the South African government 1963 an estimated 200,000 to 300,000
them. The Holocaust in the Second conceded to many of his demands. He demonstrators gathered in front of
World War strengthened their returned to India shortly afterwards and the Lincoln Memorial in Washington.
determination. by 1920 had become a dominant figure Here Martin Luther King delivered his
in national politics. Employing non-violent famous ‘I Have a Dream’ speech, hailed
The Balfour Declaration by the British civil disobedience against British rule,
government in 1917, enshrined in a as a masterpiece of rhetoric, in which
he led India to independence and he departed from his prepared text and
League of Nations mandate in 1920, inspired movements for civil rights and
had said that a ‘national home for the spoke of his dreams of freedom and
freedom across the world. He was equality arising from a land of slavery
Jewish people’ would be founded in assassinated in Delhi in January 1948.
Palestine, while preserving the ‘civil and hatred.
and religious’ rights of non-Jewish During his lifetime Gandhi was a After the assassination of John F
communities there. The British struggled hugely divisive figure, but one major Kennedy three months later, President
to reconcile these conflicting principles. achievement still resonates today: Lyndon Johnson used his influence in
his theory and practice of bringing Congress to bring about much of
On 29 November 1947, the United together great masses of highly
Nations General Assembly voted to Kennedy’s legislative agenda including
motivated and disciplined protesters the Civil Rights Act (1964) that banned
partition Palestine between a Jewish in public spaces. Here his spiritual
and an Arab state, with Jerusalem discrimination based on ‘race, color,
beliefs were crucial: in particular the religion, or national origin’ in employment
under an international regime. The assumption that, regardless of the
Jews agreed but the Arabs did not. practices and public accommodations.
regime people lived under – democracy Subsequent legislation included the
They called the declaration of the State or dictatorship, capitalist or socialist –
of Israel ‘al-Nakba’, the catastrophe. Voting Rights Act (1965); the Immigration
they will always possess a freedom and Nationality Services Act in the
Inter-communal fighting had preceded of conscience, an inner capacity to same year, opening entry to the US
the declaration and after it, five Arab make moral choices in everyday life. to immigrants other than traditional
armies invaded. By the time of an European groups; and the Fair Housing
Act of 1968, banning discrimination
in the sale or rental of housing.

1. Source: BBC.

18
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31. The emergence of and the last naturally occurring case altering the Arab political landscape.’
HIV/AIDS in the early 1980s was diagnosed on 26 October 1977. Parliamentary elections in Tunisia and
It had been responsible for an estimated Egypt in 2014 were peaceful and marked
The AIDS epidemic officially began
300–500 million deaths during the a significant milestone in the political
in June 1981 when the US Centers
20th century. An eradication campaign, transition to democracy, although there
for Disease Control and Prevention
initiated by the World Health Organisation is continuing armed conflict in Libya.
reported unusual clusters of a type of
in 1958 and intensified in 1967, deployed
pneumonia in five homosexual men in
a range of strategies including
Los Angeles. Over the next 18 months, 34. The invention of the
vaccination programmes, surveillance credit card in 1950
more such clusters were discovered
and prevention measures which aimed
among otherwise healthy men in cities The idea of a payment card that could
to contain epidemic hotspots and better
throughout the United States. Health be used at multiple locations, and which
inform affected populations, to combat
authorities soon realised that nearly was operated by a middleman between
the disease. It was the first disease
half of the people identified with the companies and their customers, was
to have been fought on a global scale,
syndrome were not homosexual men: invented in 1950. Until then, individual
with unprecedented collaboration by
the same opportunistic infections were retailers – such as large department
countries around the world, and was
being reported among haemophiliacs, stores – would offer charge accounts
officially declared eradicated in 1980.
heterosexual intravenous drug users, for their customers which could be
and Haitian immigrants. By August 1982, accessed by a loyalty card. The first
the disease was being referred to as 33. The popular protests and Diners Club credit cards were given
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome uprisings in North Africa
out in 1950 to 200 people, and were
(AIDS). In 1983, Dr Luc Montagnier of and the Middle East, known
as the ‘Arab Spring’ accepted by 14 restaurants in New
the Institut Pasteur in France and Dr York. It was joined in 1958 by American
Robert Gallo of the Institute of Human Mohamed Bouazizi, a Tunisian street Express, which was the first to use
Virology in the US identified the human vendor, set himself alight on plastic in their material instead of
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as the 17 December 2010 in protest at the paper or cardboard. The Barclaycard,
infectious agent responsible for AIDS. confiscation of his wares and the launched in 1966, was the first
It is believed to have had its origins in harassment and humiliation that he all-purpose credit card scheme to
the emergence of one specific strain reported was inflicted on him by a be operated by a British bank. Two
in Léopoldville in the Belgian Congo municipal official. His act was a catalyst particular challenges it faced were
(now Kinshasa in the Democratic for demonstrations and riots throughout overcoming the attitude that credit
Republic of the Congo) in the 1920s. Tunisia in protest at the endemic and cards were ‘undesirable American
Since it was first identified, AIDS has long-standing corruption, repression influences’; and the widely held view
caused an estimated 36 million deaths and inequality in the country. Ten days that the credit card was an inflationary
worldwide (as of 2012) and a similar later, President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali system that encouraged people
number are living with HIV globally. The and his family fled the country after to spend money they did not have.
development of antiretroviral drugs has 23 years in power. The Tunisian protests
meant that in many parts of the world inspired uprisings in other countries,
HIV has become a chronic condition in including Libya, Egypt, Bahrain and Syria. 35. The invention
of the laser
which progression to AIDS has become One year on, Tunisian writer and academic
increasingly rare. In many African Larbi Sadiki wrote that Bouazizi’s The process of light amplification by
countries, however, where access to self-immolation ‘would change the course the stimulated emission of radiation
such drugs is limited, it remains a leading of Arab political history … it will be years was first mooted by Albert Einstein
cause of death. before 17 December 2010 and the in 1917, but it was not until 1960 that
subsequent chain of events his act set scientists were able to develop the
32. The eradication off in Tunisia – and later on across the first functioning laser.
of smallpox Arab world – are profoundly grasped
The laser differs from other sources of
by historians and social scientists.
Smallpox is believed to have emerged light because it emits light coherently,
The man and the act spawned a hugely
in human populations around 10,000 BC allowing extremely narrow and precise
unprecedented movement, forever

20
Barclaycard advert, 1960s

focus and over a long distance. It is forever altered the balance of power 38. The development
used in fibre optic communication, within the United Nations and the of open source software
CD players, bloodless surgery, dentistry, political complexity of every region and open licence
welding, fingerprint detection, missile of the globe. The licences for most software
guidance systems, spectroscopy, packages are designed to take away
fluorescence microscopy, printing,
37. The Cold War, from the purchaser’s freedom to share and
barcode scanning and cellulite reduction. the 1940s to the 1990s change it. By contrast, open source
software and computer code can
The Cold War split the temporary
36. The independence wartime alliance against Nazi Germany,
be freely used, changed, and shared
of former colonies of by anyone. It is typically produced
leaving the USSR and the US as two
European powers collaboratively: programmers improve
superpowers with deep-seated economic
There was no one single process of and share the source code and allow
and political differences. In truth, though,
post-war decolonisation. In some areas, others to improve it further, and the
tensions between the Russian Empire,
it was peaceful, and orderly. In many right to do so is often protected and
other European countries and the
others, independence was achieved guaranteed under a GNU General
United States dated back to the middle
only after a protracted revolutionary Public License. (The GNU Project was
of the 19th century, and in the mid-1920s
struggle. Some acquired stable conceived in 1983 as a way of bringing
Joseph Stalin was already describing a
governments almost immediately; back the co-operative spirit that prevailed
bipolar world of socialist and capitalist
others were ruled by dictators or in the computing community in earlier
countries.
military juntas for decades, or endured days – to make co-operation possible
Its defining features included the threat once again by removing the obstacles
long civil wars.
of nuclear war and the accompanying to co-operation imposed by the owners
In 1946, there were 35 member doctrine of mutually assured destruction; of proprietary software.) The underlying
states in the United Nations; as newly the rise of the military-industrial complex principle has since spread into different
independent nations joined the that thrived on such a threat; the creation fields, from discovering new drugs
organisation, this number swelled to of the CIA; the NATO alliance; the Berlin to content production on Wikipedia.
127 by 1970. The majority of the new Wall; the 1956 Hungarian Uprising; the
members had a few characteristics in Cuban missile crisis; the Soviet crushing
39. The invention of
common: they were non-white, with of the ‘Prague Spring’ in 1968; proxy wars the CT scanner
developing economies, facing internal in countries such as Korea, Vietnam and
problems that were the result of their Afghanistan; competition for influence in The CT (computerised tomography) scan
colonial past, which sometimes put them Latin America, the Middle East and the was invented by Sir Godfrey Hounsfield
at odds with European countries and newly independent countries of Africa; FRS in the early 1970s at the EMI
made them suspicious of European- psychological warfare, propaganda Laboratories in England. The technology
style governmental structures, political and espionage; and technological uses x-rays and computer imaging to
ideas, and economic institutions. A competition such as the Space Race. create cross-sectional slices of the body.
significant number became ideological It ushered in a new age in medicine
East–West tensions subsided through and diagnosis as the images provided
battlegrounds in the Cold War between
the mid-to-late 1980s, culminating in extremely high detail at the specific
the US and the Soviet Union, with
START, the most significant nuclear location, or slice, of body structures
the widespread use of aid packages,
arms reduction treaty, signed in 1991. such as bones, soft tissue, brain, organs
technical assistance and sometimes
With President Gorbachev’s liberalising and blood vessels. It introduced the
even military intervention.
reforms of perestroika (‘reorganisation’) concepts of digital data acquisition,
The unravelling of empires and the and glasnost (‘openness’), the debilitating sophisticated interactive display systems
creation of a swathe of new countries, cost to the Soviet economy of the and powerful image processing to in vivo
some of which occupied strategic arms race, and pressure for biological studies. Hounsfield first
locations, others of which possessed democratisation in Eastern Europe, practised ‘on a brain of a cow my
significant natural resources, and many the Cold War was effectively over. colleague got from a kosher house
of which were desperately poor,

80 moments that shaped the world  21


uitous
w ubiq
s are no
a -phone
D igital camer

on the other side of London’, and 41. The invasion of Iraq George Eastman’s US$1 Brownie
submitted his own head for the first in 2003 which deposed camera had turned photography
human trials. For this work, the self-taught the government of into a hobby for the masses back at
Hounsfield (he never went to university) Saddam Hussein the beginning of the 20th century.
shared the 1979 Nobel Prize for The 2003 invasion of Iraq lasted from From his intention ‘to make the
Physiology or Medicine with the South 19 March to 1 May 2003. It consisted camera as convenient as the pencil’
African scientist Allan Cormack. of 21 days of major combat operations, he developed a global, instantly
in which a combined force of troops recognisable, multi-billion dollar
from the United States, the UK, Australia business, Kodak, characterised by
40. China’s hosting
of the 2008 Olympics and Poland invaded Iraq and deposed the slogan ‘You press the button, we
the Ba’athist government of Saddam do the rest’. Sassoon’s invention was a
The announcement in 2001 that Beijing classic example of disruptive innovation:
Hussein. The invasion phase concluded
would host the 2008 Olympic Games, creating a new market and value
with the capture of the Iraqi capital
building on 30 years of economic reform network, eventually disrupting an
Baghdad by American forces. According
and gradual opening out to the West, existing market and value network,
to US President George W Bush and
marked China’s emergence as a major and displacing an earlier technology.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, the
global player. The Beijing Games were In 1976 Kodak accounted for 90 per
coalition mission was ‘to disarm Iraq
to be an important political test for Xi cent of film and 85 per cent of camera
of weapons of mass destruction, to end
Jinping, at the time China’s leader-in- sales in America. In January 2012 it
Saddam Hussein’s support for terrorism,
waiting, who took personal charge of filed for bankruptcy protection but has
and to free the Iraqi people.’ Saddam
preparations. As an exercise in public survived the digital revolution with
Hussein was captured in December
diplomacy, despite controversies and plans to continue as a smaller digital
2003, put on trial for crimes against
setbacks this was to be a resounding imaging company.
humanity, and hanged three years later.
success for him, helping to project a
successful national brand image of The invasion was strongly opposed by
China as an emerging global power. some long-standing US allies, including 43. The Long March (1934–35)
The Games left behind a legacy of a the governments of France, Germany This began the ascent to power of Mao
transformed Beijing – symbolised by and New Zealand. Opponents of military Zedong and the Chinese Communist
the National Stadium, nicknamed the intervention criticised the decision Party. It was in fact three military retreats,
‘Bird’s Nest’, and the National Swimming to invade Iraq along a number of lines, rather than one single march, undertaken
Centre, known as the ‘Water Cube’ – including calling into question the by the First, Second and Fourth Red
and an improved environment and evidence used to justify the war and Armies to escape from the Kuomintang
better reputation for business and warning that it could potentially (Chinese Nationalist Party) army.
tourism. During the Games themselves, destabilise the surrounding region.
Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Mauritius and The year-long march by the First Red
Togo all experienced podium finishes Army, the most well-known, was from
42. The invention of Jiangxi province in the south-east
for the first time; athletes from Mongolia the digital camera
and Panama achieved their countries’ of the country through western China,
first Olympic gold medals; Michael Phelps The world’s first digital camera was and then north to Shaanxi, where all
bettered Mark Spitz’s achievement at invented in 1975 by Steven Sassoon, three armies linked up once again.
the 1972 Munich Games by claiming an engineer at Eastman Kodak. This The Communists, under the eventual
eight swimming gold medals; and the so-called ‘portable’ digital device, the command of Mao Zedong and Zhou
incredible Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt size of a domestic toaster, weighed Enlai reportedly travelled over 6,000
broke both the 100 metre and 200 metre 8lbs (3.6kg) and was powered by miles, crossing 18 mountain ranges.
world records and claimed a third 16 nickel cadmium batteries. It used Of the original 87,000 who set out,
gold and world record with the a lens from a Super-8 movie camera only 10,000 survived.
Jamaican 4x100 metre relay team. and the image was recorded onto
The Long March decisively established
a digital cassette recorder (a process
Mao’s leadership of the Chinese
which reportedly took 23 seconds).
Communist Party. It enabled the Red

22
Af te
r th e
t su n
ami:
B an
da A
ceh ,
In d o
n e sia

Army to reach a base area in Yan’an, significantly. Amongst other things, and Argentina including, in Germany,
beyond the direct control of the it led to the creation of the euro. The an all-time-high audience of 41.89 million
Nationalists, from where they grew 2004 proposed Constitutional Treaty (an 86.3 per cent share).
in strength and eventually defeated sought to replace previous treaties with
the Nationalists in the struggle to a single foundational document for the
46. The 2004 tsunami
control mainland China. EU but was rejected by French and in the Indian Ocean
Dutch voters. The Lisbon Treaty, which
amended rather than replaced all Tsunami is a Japanese word from
44. The creation of the a double root: tsu, meaning port or
European Union and earlier treaties, was subsequently
adopted in 2009. harbour, and nami, meaning wave.
the process of integration
which followed The word looks innocuous in simple
Through progressive rounds of translation, but to those who live
The European Union is a political and enlargements, membership of the union on the rim of the Pacific or Indian
economic union intended to draw a line has developed into what we now know Oceans it can spell disaster.
under the series of frequent, bloody as the EU. It currently consists of 28
conflicts that had characterised Europe states: the original six plus Denmark, On 26 December 2004, off the coast
in the years leading up to the Second Ireland, the UK, Greece, Spain, Portugal, of Sumatra, an undersea earthquake
World War. The brainchild of the political Austria, Finland, Sweden, the Czech caused a 750-mile section of the
economist Jean Monnet and the then Republic, Cyprus, Estonia, Latvia, Earth’s crust to jolt upwards by
French Foreign Minister, Robert Schuman, Lithuania, Hungary, Malta, Poland, about 30 feet, displacing hundreds
it started life in 1951 as the European Slovenia, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Romania of cubic kilometres of water. The
Coal and Steel Community. Monnet and and Croatia. Current ‘candidate’ energy released was estimated to
Schuman believed that uniting the coal countries hoping to join are Turkey, be equivalent to 26 megatons of TNT,
and steel industries – essential for the Iceland, Montenegro, Serbia and the more than 1,500 times powerful than
production of munitions – across France Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. the Hiroshima atomic bomb. It was the
and Germany under an innovative third largest earthquake ever recorded
supranational system would ‘make on a seismograph.
45. The global popularity
war not only unthinkable but materially of football and the In deep water waves travel quickly,
impossible.’ The ECSC also included World Cup but remain low. On reaching shallower
Belgium, Italy, Luxembourg and the water their height increases. This tsunami
Netherlands. The history of football dates back to
reached speeds of up to 500mph and
at least the eighth century AD. The
The same six countries signed the heights of almost 100 feet. The Nicobar
modern rules of the game are based
Treaty of Rome (1958) which established and Andaman Islands were the first
on mid-19th century efforts to
the European Economic Community coastlines to be hit, less than ten
standardise the widely varying forms
with four basic principles (the ‘four minutes after the initial quake. The
in which it was played in the public
freedoms’): free movement of labour; tsunami reached Thailand and Sri Lanka
schools of England. It is the one sport
capital, goods, and services. after two hours, and Somalia after seven
that has overwhelming global appeal,
hours. The wave spread around the
A succession of further treaties led to transcending national, cultural, religious
world, with tidal fluctuations being
closer European political integration, and gender boundaries, as well as
recorded as far away as Iceland and
including a wider trade remit, a single socio-economic class. Football’s
the Eastern United States. Indonesia
currency, and in areas such as justice, governing body, FIFA, estimated that at
suffered the greatest number of
home affairs and foreign and security the turn of the 21st century approximately
casualties, with an estimated loss
policy. Two treaties in particular 250 million people (including 30 million
of nearly 168,000 people, and
triggered a strong public response in women) were playing football on a regular
more than half a million people left
the UK and elsewhere. The 1993 basis. The World Cup is the most widely
homeless. Some 275,000 people
Maastricht Treaty turned the European viewed sporting event in the world:
were killed in 14 countries.
Community into the European Union over one billion people around the world
and expanded the Union’s policy remit watched the 2014 final between Germany

80 moments that shaped the world  23


About US$14 billion was raised 48. The assassination of 49. The influence of
internationally for disaster relief. The US President Kennedy the American singer
scale of the generous public response Michael Jackson
On 22 November 1963, John F Kennedy
was unprecedented, not only in the Michael Jackson (1958–2009)
was hit in the head and throat when
amount of money raised but also morphed from a lovable, pint-sized
three shots were fired at his open-topped
in the proportion of funding from the pre-teen with a puffy Afro and an
car. The presidential motorcade was
general public, and the speed with electric voice into a superstar whose
travelling through the main business
which money was pledged or donated. eccentricities drove one tabloid
area of Dallas, Texas. He died in hospital
shortly afterwards. Ninety minutes later, headline after another. But like Elvis
47. The creation of Lyndon B Johnson was sworn in and Bob Dylan before him, Jackson
Wikipedia in 2001 on board Air Force One as the 36th reshaped pop culture and influenced
President of the United States. Standing just about every popular musician who
Wikipedia, a free, open-source,
dignified at his side, Jacqueline Kennedy came after him in one way or another.
collaborative encyclopedia, was launched
by Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger in faced slightly away from the camera so
January 2001 and is now the sixth-most that bloodstains on her pink Chanel suit 50. The Live Aid Concert
popular website and constitutes the would not be visible. in 1985
internet’s largest and most popular Perhaps for the first time, mass media Live Aid was a dual-venue concert held
general reference work. As of February was capable of uniting the world in on 13 July 1985, organised by Bob
2014, it had 18 billion page views and instant shock and disbelief at a life cut Geldof and Midge Ure to raise funds
nearly 500 million unique visitors each short. He had inspired a generation, for relief of the famine in Ethiopia. Billed
month. It is supported and hosted by and the grief that many felt was for the as the ‘global jukebox’, the event was
the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation. sudden loss of a sense of hope, held simultaneously in London and
In a 2004 interview, Wales outlined his ambition and possibility. Almost Philadelphia, with concerts inspired
vision for Wikipedia: ‘Imagine a world everyone of that generation is able to by the initiative taking place in other
in which every single person on the say where they were when they heard countries such as Australia and Germany.
planet is given free access to the sum Kennedy had been shot. The suspected The event was the most ambitious
of all human knowledge. That’s what gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was never international satellite television venture
we’re doing.’ Sanger coined its name, tried as he was shot dead himself two that had ever been attempted: an
a portmanteau of wiki (from the Hawaiian days later by nightclub owner Jack Ruby. estimated global audience of 1.9 billion,
word for ‘quick’) and encyclopedia. The Warren Report, commissioned across 150 nations, watched the live
Although Wikipedia’s content was to investigate the President’s death, broadcast. It is estimated that around
initially only in English, it quickly became concluded he had been killed by shots £150 million was raised for famine
multilingual, through the launch of fired by Mr Oswald, but conspiracy relief as a direct result of the concerts.
versions in different languages. The enthusiasts quickly turned the On its 20th anniversary a further set
English Wikipedia is now one of more assassination into one of the most of concerts, known as Live 8, was held
than 200 Wikipedias, but remains disputed events in modern history. in support of the UK’s Make Poverty
the largest one, with over 4.6 million Why Oswald shot Kennedy, and whether History campaign and the Global Call
articles. 2 The vast majority of the top he acted alone or was part of a wider for Action Against Poverty. More than
100 websites on the world wide web conspiracy, has been the subject of 1,000 musicians performed at the
are run by corporations. The only real official inquiries and countless films, concerts, which were broadcast on
exception is Wikipedia. books, and newspaper and magazine 182 television networks and 2,000
articles over the past 50 years. radio networks.

2. Source: Wikipedia.

24
51. The Bretton 52. greater equality in many The gay liberation movement that then
Woods Agreement parts of the world for emerged in the 1970s saw myriad
gay and lesbian people political organisations spring up in
In 1944, with the end of the Second
A turning point for gay liberation came Britain, the US and other parts of the
World War in sight, 730 delegates from
on 28 June 1969, when patrons of the world, and the last decade of the
all 44 Allied nations met at a hotel in
Stonewall Inn in New York’s Greenwich 20th century heralded a new era of
New Hampshire, USA. The meeting was
Village fought back against years of gay celebrity power and media visibility.
held in an attempt to ‘outlaw practices
ongoing police harassment, humiliation, At the same time a quieter gay rights
which are agreed to be harmful to world
brutality and entrapment tactics. In the battle was being won in the workplace:
prosperity’. In short, an international
words of one participant, ‘it was total a growing number of companies today
banking system was to be established.
outrage, anger, sorrow, everything are paying attention to treating their
Following this meeting, the International
combined… There was something in the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender
Monetary Fund (IMF) was founded, all
air, freedom a long time overdue, and (LGBT) employees the same way as
currencies were required to be
we’re going to fight for it. It took different their straight peers. Same-sex civil
convertible for trade, and exchange
forms, but the bottom line was, we unions or civil partnerships are now
rates were modified so that one nation
weren’t going to go away. And we didn’t.’ possible in Australia, Finland, several
would not be favoured over another.
Stonewall has been commemorated ever central European and central American
The ideas founded at this conference led
since with ‘Pride marches’ held every countries; and same-sex marriage
to the development of the World Bank.
June. It was the drag queens who led has become legal in Argentina, Belgium,
the spontaneous uprising against the Brazil, Canada, Denmark, France,
police at Stonewall, and it is they who Iceland, the Netherlands, New Zealand,
traditionally lead the New York march. Norway, Portugal, Spain, South Africa,
Live Aid conc
er t, Wembl Sweden, various US states and the
ey Stadiu
m , London
1985
UK. But there is a long way to go:
homosexuality remains illegal in 40
of the 53 Commonwealth countries.
Pe o p l
e cele
b r atin
g Wo
r ld Pr
id e in
Lond
o n, 20
12
y
tD isn e
Wal

53. The influence of a coalition of forces from 34 countries stretched far beyond normal sporting
Walt Disney on cinema opposing Iraq’s aggression was formed, boundaries. As Pienaar said at the end
and popular culture the largest coalition since the Second of the game, ‘We did not have 63,000
Walt Disney (1901–66) was an American World War. On 16 January 1991 a fans behind us today; we had 43 million
business magnate, animator, cartoonist, massive air campaign was launched. South Africans.’ Nelson Mandela later
producer, director, screenwriter, The main targets were military, but the became a godfather to Pienaar’s son and
philanthropist and voice actor. With his Iraqi capital Baghdad was heavily hit the two men remained life-long friends.
brother Roy he founded Walt Disney and there were many civilian casualties.
After six weeks of intense bombing and
Productions, which later became one 56. The growth of
of the most powerful film production a three-day ground campaign, much of low-cost air travel
companies in the world. He and his it heavily televised (thanks to new satellite
technology), Iraqi troops retreated from Regional airlines in the US built the
staff created some of the world’s
Kuwait. There was some criticism of the low-cost model in the 1970s: they
best-known fictional characters including
Bush administration, which chose to allow held down maintenance and training
Mickey Mouse, for whom Disney himself
Saddam to remain in power instead of costs by using just one kind of aircraft,
provided the original voice. During his
pushing on to capture Baghdad and bought in large numbers with bulk
lifetime he won 22 Oscars from a total
overthrow his government, but there discounts, and charged for, or did
of 59 nominations, including a record
were persuasive arguments that this away with, ‘extras’ like meals, drinks
four in one year, giving him more awards
would have breached the UN mandate and reclining seats. Their planes used
and nominations than any other individual
and fractured the coalition, and would smaller airports with lower landing
in history.
have had considerable human and charges, and with quick turnarounds
political costs associated with it. could spend less time on the ground
54. The Gulf War, 1990–91 and more time in the air. Laker Airways,
the first to offer a no-frills transatlantic
On 2 August 1990, after weeks of 55. South Africa winning the service, was undone by the recession
sabre-rattling, Iraq bombed Kuwait City Rugby World Cup in 1995
of the early 1980s and by predatory
and launched a ground invasion with
The Rugby World Cup was the first competitors, but in Europe three other
120,000 troops, putting its army within
major sporting event to take place airlines led the way. Ryanair began in
easy striking distance of Saudi oil fields.
in South Africa following the end 1985 with a 15-seat turboprop aircraft
US President George HW Bush sent
of apartheid. On the day of the final, flying between Waterford on the south
troops to Saudi Arabia at the request
President Nelson Mandela chose to coast of Ireland and London Gatwick,
of King Fahd and Saddam Hussein
wear the Springbok jersey, regarded Air Berlin grew in the 1980s out of a
responded by declaring Kuwait to
by some as the ultimate symbol of charter airline, and Easyjet followed
be Iraq’s 19th province.
the regime that had imprisoned him. ten years later with two routes, Luton
These events followed the bloody and ‘When Nelson Mandela walked into to Glasgow and Luton to Edinburgh.
prolonged Iran–Iraq war (1980–88) the changing room wearing that All three took full advantage of booming
which had left Iraq with some US$80 Springbok rugby jersey,’ said the consumer demand, the arrival of internet
billion worth of debts, mainly to Kuwait winger Chester Williams, ‘it was done. booking and the deregulation of the
and Saudi Arabia. Iraq pressured both We had to win that game. Everybody European aviation industry, and their
nations to forgive the debts, but they expected him to wear a suit and tie. low-cost operations currently embrace
refused. Over-production by Kuwait It changed the attitude and spirit of 186, 150 and 140 destinations
and UAE drove down the price of oil, the team – and it changed the whole respectively.
with a devastating effect on Iraq’s mind-set of the nation.’ South Africa
attempts to rebuild its war-ravaged defeated New Zealand 15–12, with Joel
infrastructure. Stransky scoring a drop goal in extra
time to win the match. The achievement
After a series of UN Security Council
of Francois Pienaar and his teammates
and Arab League resolutions,

28
57. The designation of World together piece by piece, led to similar 59. George Orwell’s novel
Heritage Sites by UNESCO, campaigns, saving Venice and its Nineteen Eighty-Four
which began in 1972 lagoon in Italy, the ruins of Mohenjo-
George Orwell, novelist, essayist,
UNESCO’s World Heritage Programme daro in Pakistan, and the Borobodur
journalist and polemicist, was one
was established in 1972 and has been Temple Compounds in Indonesia.
of the most admired and controversial
ratified by 191 countries. It catalogues, writers of modern times. His 1945 novel
names, and conserves sites of 58. The establishment of Animal Farm, based on Stalin’s betrayal
outstanding cultural or natural importance the Paralympic Games of the Russian Revolution, made his
(these may be a forest, mountain, lake, reputation; Nineteen Eighty-Four,
On 29 July 1948, the day of the Opening
island, desert, monument, building, set in an imaginary totalitarian future,
Ceremony of the London 1948 Olympic
complex, or city). Over 1,000 sites are cemented it. It opens with the line ‘It
Games, the neurologist Dr Ludwig
currently listed including Angkor in was a bright cold day in April, and the
Guttmann organised the first competition
Cambodia; Ilulissat Icefjord on the west clocks were striking thirteen.’ Originally
for wheelchair athletes, at the National
coast of Greenland; the Old Walled City titled The Last Man In Europe, it tells the
Spinal Injuries Centre which he had
of Shibam (Yemen) and the Old City of story of Winston Smith, an everyman
established at Stoke Mandeville Hospital
Dubrovnik (Croatia); and the Ngorongoro for his times, and was described by
in the English countryside. In 1952, the
Conservation Area in Tanzania, which Orwell’s publisher, when he received
International Stoke Mandeville Games
has the largest concentration of wild the manuscript, as ‘amongst the most
were founded and grew into the
animals in the world. terrifying books I have ever read’. The
Paralympic Games which were first
held in Rome in 1960 and featured 400 adjective ‘Orwellian’ derives from this
The genesis of the programme was
athletes from 23 countries. The Games book alone and Orwell’s belief that
in 1954 when the government of Egypt
are now the second biggest sporting wellbeing is crushed by restrictive,
decided to build the Aswan Dam,
event in the world. Professor Sir Ludwig authoritarian and untruthful government.
which would deluge a valley containing
‘Poppa’ Guttmann FRS, a pre-war refugee The Big Brother state which he describes
treasures of ancient Egypt such as
from Nazi Germany, died in 1980 at the aims at nothing less than the control of
the Abu Simbel temples. A worldwide
age of 80. language and thought. According to
safeguarding campaign led by UNESCO,
the slogans repeated by the Ministry
in which the Abu Simbel and Philae
of Truth, ‘War is Peace, Freedom is
temples were taken apart, moved to
Slavery, Ignorance is Strength.’ Deprive
a higher location, and put back
people of the words with which to
resist, Orwell told us, and you will crush
resistance. In increasingly poor health
The Stoke Mande
ville Games,
as he struggled to finish the novel,
the precu
rsor to th
e P a r a ly Orwell died seven months after it was
m pic G
ame s . published.
Photo
cour te
s y of
Whee
lPow
er
The f
ir s t c
loned
sheep
, Dolly
w i th h
er lam
b Bonn
y. Photo
courtes
y of T h e
Roslin Inst
itute, The
Universit y
of Edinburgh
60. The first successful It is now the largest academic institution 63. The invention of
cloning of a mammal, in 1996 in the United Kingdom (and one of the the instant noodle
largest in Europe) by student number.
Dolly, who was named after the singer In 1958 Taiwan-born Momofuku Ando
Since it was founded, more than
Dolly Parton and had three mothers, invented the instant noodle in Japan.
1.5 million students have studied
was born on 5 July 1996 and died from It was first marketed in 1958 by his
its courses, and it was rated the top
a progressive lung disease five months company Nissin, under the brand name
university in England and Wales for
before her seventh birthday. Known Chikin Ramen. By 2013 the global
student satisfaction in 2005, 2006
as the world’s most famous sheep, demand for instant noodles had reached
and 2012.
she was the first mammal to be cloned 105 billion packets. The Momofuku Ando
from an adult somatic cell, by scientists Instant Ramen Museum in Osaka includes
at the Roslin Institute, part of the 62. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi a recreation of the garden shed
University of Edinburgh. Of her mothers, in which he carried out his research
In the 1990 Burmese general election
one provided the egg, another the DNA and created a new food culture.
the party which Aung San Suu Kyi
and a third carried the cloned embryo
had founded, the National League for
to term. She had six lambs: Bonnie, the
Democracy, won 59 per cent of the 64. The adoption of
twins Sally and Rosie, and the triplets the eight Millennium
national vote and 81 per cent of the seats
Lucy, Darcy and Cotton. Dolly represents Development Goals (MDGs)
in Parliament. Daw Suu Kyi , however,
one of the most important milestones in
had already been detained under house In 2000, 191 nations made a promise
the history of animal cloning, as it proves
arrest before the elections, as someone to free people from extreme poverty
that cloning of adult animals is possible.
‘likely to undermine the community and deprivation. This pledge turned
peace and stability’ of the country. into the eight Millennium Development
61. The creation in 1969 of She remained under house arrest for Goals which embody basic human
the Open University in the UK, almost 15 years between 1989 and rights – the rights of each person on
the world’s first successful 2010, becoming in the process one the planet to health, education, shelter
‘distance teaching’ university
of the world’s most prominent political and security.
In 1969, when only five per cent of prisoners. She became an international
symbol of peaceful resistance in the The MDGs – which range from halving
Britons went on to higher education
face of oppression and was awarded extreme poverty rates to halting
and more than half of UK employees
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991. In her the spread of HIV/AIDS and providing
had no qualifications, the Open
acceptance speech, delivered in Oslo universal primary education, all by the
University was a hugely innovative
two decades later, Daw Suu Kyi spoke target date of 2015 – form a blueprint
idea. It had no entry requirements.
of the virtue of kindness: agreed to by all the world’s countries
It welcomed part-time and mature
and all the world’s leading development
students. It was ‘open’, and meant it.
‘Of the sweets of adversity, and let me institutions. They have galvanised
Prime Minister Harold Wilson described
say that these are not numerous, I have unprecedented efforts to meet the
its creation as the greatest
found the sweetest, the most precious needs of the world’s poorest. The UN
achievement of his premiership.
of all, is the lesson I learnt on the value is also working with governments,
The concept of distance learning, of kindness. Every kindness I received, civil society organisations and other
powered and supported by radio and small or big, convinced me that there partners to build on the momentum
television, was revolutionary. Today, could never be enough of it in our world. generated by the MDGs and carry
in the age of the internet and MOOCs, To be kind is to respond with sensitivity on with an ambitious post-2015
with a huge and growing global market and human warmth to the hopes and development agenda.
for education, driven by a young needs of others. Even the briefest touch
population in the developing world of kindness can lighten a heavy heart.
and an increasing commitment to Kindness can change the lives of people.’
lifelong learning in the developed
In 2012 Daw Suu Kyi was elected to the
world, it is easy to forget the trail
lower house of the Burmese parliament,
the Open University blazed.
and intends to stand in the presidential
elections in 2015.

80 moments that shaped the world  31


Daw
Aung
San S
uu Ky
i at th
e Briti
sh Cou
ncil, Lo
ndon , O
ctober 2
013
ng container
ous shippi
the u nglamor
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dep en
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Globa

65. Discovery of the fossil and directed 30 films in a career also known as longshoremen in the
‘Australopithecus sediba’ spanning 57 years. His multi- United States, or ‘wharfies’ in Australia.
in 2008 in South Africa perspective drama Rashomon became An American transport entrepreneur,
The fossil skeletons of Au. sediba were the surprise winner of the Golden Lion Malcom McLean, is credited with
discovered at the Cradle of Humankind at the 1951 Venice Film Festival. Its introducing the concept of the container
World Heritage Site near Johannesburg. subsequent commercial and critical in 1956. At a stroke he created huge
The six skeletons – a juvenile male, an success opened up Western film increases in port and ship productivity.
adult female, an adult male and three markets for the first time to the wealth of By making shipping so cheap that
infants – were found together at the Japanese films that already existed, industry could locate factories far from
bottom of the Malapa Cave, where they which in turn led to international its customers, the container paved the
apparently fell to their death, and have recognition for other Japanese film- way for Asia to become the world’s
been dated to almost two million years makers. Kurosawa’s best-known films workshop and brought consumers
ago. The remains were unusually are his samurai epics Seven Samurai a previously unimaginable variety of
complete, and through a combination and Yojimbo. His mix of Eastern and products from around the world. The
of high resolution scans and precision Western styles and stories had a massive container transformed economic
measurements of the skull, pelvis, hand impact on other directors, including geography, devastating traditional ports
and foot, scientists have argued that Steven Spielberg and George Lucas. and fuelling the growth of previously
Au. sediba, was an immediate ancestor In 1990, he received the Academy obscure ones such as Tanjung Pelepas in
of Homo erectus, the ancient form from Award for Lifetime Achievement. Malaysia and Yingkou in north-east China.
which modern humans arose.
68. The achievements of 70. The achievements and
the Chinese basketball influence of the champion
66. The American
player Yao Ming boxer Muhammad Ali
athlete Jesse Owens
Shanghai-born Yao Ming played for Muhammad Ali, born Cassius Marcellus
Jesse Owens was described by the
the Houston Rockets of the National Clay, is one of the greatest heavyweights
New York Times as ‘perhaps the greatest
Basketball Association in the USA. He in the history of boxing. A controversial
and most famous athlete in track and
was the first overall draft pick of 2002, and polarising figure during his early
field history’. His 1935 achievement of
the most coveted of all the new players career, Ali is today widely regarded not
setting three world records and tying
joining the league that year: a previously only for the skills he displayed in the
another in less than an hour has never
unimaginable achievement for a Chinese ring but also the values he exemplified
been equalled. At the 1936 Olympics in
athlete. Following in the footsteps of outside of it: religious freedom, racial
Berlin, he won four gold medals, in the
American sporting giants like ‘Magic’ justice and the triumph of principle
100 metres, 200 metres, long jump, and
Johnson and Shaquille O’Neal, in nine over expedience. He is one of the most
4x100 metre relay. He was the most
years with the Rockets the 7ft 6in Yao recognised sports figures of the past
successful athlete at the games. In the
became a star in his own right and one 100 years, crowned ‘Sports Personality
words of the American sportswriter
of the most famous people in China. of the Century’ by the BBC. He
Larry Schwartz, ‘When Owens finished
transformed the role and image of the
competing, the African-American son
African American athlete by his embrace
of a sharecropper and the grandson 69. The development of
the shipping container of racial pride and his willingness to
of slaves had single-handedly crushed
antagonise the white establishment
Hitler’s myth of Aryan supremacy.’ The shipping container has all the in doing so. In the words of the writer
romance of a tin can but it made shipping Joyce Carol Oates, he was one of the
67. The work and influence cheap, and by doing so changed the few athletes in any sport to completely
of the Japanese film shape of the global economy. ‘define the terms of his public reputation.’
director Akira Kurosawa
Until the middle of the 20th century New York Times columnist William Rhoden
Akira Kurosawa (1910–98) is regarded as most ship-borne cargo was loaded and wrote, ‘Ali’s actions changed my
one of the most important and influential unloaded by dockers on the quayside standard of what constituted an
film-makers in the history of cinema, and stevedores working on the ships, athlete’s greatness. Possessing a killer

80 moments that shaped the world  33


ofia
aS
ein
se oR
Mu
in th e
rn ica,
Gue

jump shot or the ability to stop on a the country. With its strong emotional 75. The founding and
dime was no longer enough. What were appeal and simple dignity, it has been lasting influence of
you doing for the liberation of your used in a variety of protests worldwide. Amnesty International
people? What were you doing to help After learning of two Portuguese students
your country live up to the covenant
73. The achievements and imprisoned for raising a toast to freedom
of its founding principles?’ influence of the Norwegian in 1961, British lawyer Peter Benenson
athlete Grete Waitz published an article, ‘The Forgotten
71. The work and influence Grete Waitz achieved an iconic status Prisoners’ in the The Observer newspaper.
of the artist Pablo Picasso, in women’s distance running, winning That article launched the ‘Appeal for
1881–1973 Amnesty 1961’, a worldwide campaign
the World Marathon title in 1983, the
Picasso’s painting Guernica is perhaps New York Marathon nine times, the that provoked a remarkable response.
his most famous work and certainly London Marathon twice, and the World Reprinted in newspapers across the
his most powerful political statement. Cross Country Championship on five world, his call to action resonated with
It was created in response to the occasions. Without fanfare she inspired the values and aspirations of people
bombing of Guernica, a Basque Country women at all levels of ability to become everywhere. This was the genesis of
village in northern Spain, by German runners. ‘She was the first world-class Amnesty International. Today, with over
and Italian warplanes at the behest distance runner and she opened the three million members and activists, it
of the Spanish Nationalist forces on doors for everyone. If it wasn’t for Grete, is the world’s largest grass-roots human
26 April 1937 during the Spanish Civil women’s distance running would not rights organisation. It investigates and
War. The painting shows the tragedies be where it is now,’ said Liz McColgan, exposes abuses, educates and mobilises
of war and the suffering it inflicts herself a winner of the New York and the public, and helps transform societies
upon individuals, particularly innocent London marathons. to create a safer, more just world. It
civilians. It has gained a monumental received the Nobel Peace Prize in
status, becoming a perpetual reminder 1977 for its campaign against torture.
74. The work and
of the tragedies of war, an anti-war influence of Andy Warhol
symbol, and an embodiment of peace. 76. The influence of
Painted in Paris in 1937, it now hangs in Andy Warhol (1928–87) was a film-maker, the New Wave
the Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid, photographer, painter, commercial
illustrator, music producer, writer, and The New Wave (La Nouvelle Vague)
Spain’s national museum of 20th
even fashion model. The world of pop was a collaborative group of young
century art.
art that engaged him was distinctly French film critics in the late 1950s and
American and reflected the burgeoning early 1960s who turned themselves
72. The protest song commercialism and vitality of America into screenwriters and directors:
‘We Shall Overcome’ principally François Truffaut, Claude
after the Second World War. He
The song was popularised by the challenged traditional boundaries Chabrol, Jacques Rivette, Eric Rohmer,
American folk singer Pete Seeger between art and life, art and business, Jean-Luc Godard, with Andre Bazin of
in 1963 and became an anthem and between different media. In the Cahiers du Cinema and Henri Langlois
of the African-American Civil Rights process he turned everyday life into art of the Cinémathèque Française as their
Movement. The title and structure of and art into a way to live the everyday. father figures. As with the so-called
the song are derived from an early As the Warhol Museum puts it, perhaps ‘Angry Young Men’, the working-class
gospel song, ‘I’ll Overcome Someday’, his greatest innovation was that he British novelists and playwrights of the
by African-American composer Charles saw no limits to his practice: ‘His Pop late 1950s, they were linked by their
Albert Tindley. Seeger and others, such sensibility embraced an anything-can- rejection of literary period pieces, by
as Joan Baez, sang the song at rallies, be-art approach – appropriating images, their willingness to experiment with
folk festivals, and concerts around ideas and even innovation itself.’ form, and to engage with social and
political change.

34
T he
sym
bo
l of
Am
ne
sty
In t
er n
atio
na
l

77. Waiting for Godot more impressionistic work, Peer Gynt, immediate aesthetic impact. In 1995,
is arguably one of the sources of with the support of the President
Samuel Beckett’s play En attendant
both the surrealist and expressionist of the Bundestag and following a
Godot (Waiting for Godot) was written
movements. A Doll’s House is a parliamentary debate, they were
between October 1948 and January
powerful critique of how an exclusively permitted to wrap the Reichstag building
1949. It was first staged in 1953 at the
male society treated women; and the in Berlin which was undergoing a
Théâtre de Babylone, Paris, directed by
eponymous heroine of Hedda Gabler, nine-year period of reconstruction. The
Roger Blin. The first English production,
remains one of the most celebrated wrapping took seven days and required
of Beckett’s own translation, was directed
and sought-after female roles in world 100,000m2 of fireproof polypropylene
two years later in London by Peter Hall.
theatre. fabric, covered by an aluminium layer,
The durability of the play, with its
and 15km of rope. The spectacle was
underlying premise that human life Although most of his plays are set in
seen by five million visitors.
is determined by chance, lies in its small coastal communities in Norway,
ambiguities, its openness to constant Ibsen wrote in Danish and spent much
interpretation, the fact that it is not of his working life in Italy and Germany. 80. The work and influence
limited to a particular place or era, of the dancer and
choreographer Pina Bausch
and not least in its enigmatic humour. 79. Wrapping the
Reichstag, 1995 Philippina ‘Pina’ Bausch (1940–2009)
78. The continuing influence was a German dancer, choreographer,
The artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude dance teacher and ballet director. With
of the Norwegian
were a married couple who created
playwright Henrik Ibsen her unique style, a blend of movement,
environmental works of art. Their projects sound, and prominent stage sets, and
Ibsen died in 1906 at the age of 78, included the wrapping of the Pont Neuf with her elaborate collaboration with
but his influence can be felt in most bridge in Paris, a 24-mile-long artwork performers during the development
of the great 20th century dramatic called Running Fence in California, and of a piece, she became a leading
realists, from Chekhov to Osborne – The Gates in New York City’s Central influence in the field of modern dance
in particular the psychological depth Park. Although their work is visually from the 1970s on. In 2005, the
of his later characters and his impressive and often controversial as a director and performer Neil Bartlett
constant questioning of moral and result of its scale, the artists repeatedly celebrated her work in The Guardian:
political conventions. His earlier, denied that their projects contained ‘No theatre was as brutally or as elegantly
any deeper meaning than their in the present tense as Bausch’s, no
women are more powerful than hers,
no men more tender, no steps, slaps,
Wrapping the Reichs
tag looks or touches were ever as real.’

80 moments that shaped the world  35


Panellists’
biographies
Assia Bensalah Alaoui is Dame Claire Bertschinger is
Ambassador at large for His Majesty Director of Tropical Nursing Studies at
the King of Morocco. She has been the London School of Hygiene and
a professor of English and of law Tropical Medicine. She has worked
at Mohammed V University in Rabat. with the emergency disaster relief
In 2002–03 she co-chaired the EU group of the International Committee
high-level panel on dialogue between of the Red Cross in over a dozen zones Nadia al-Sakkaf Dr Tian Belawati
cultures and peoples in the Euro- of conflict including Afghanistan,
Mediterranean area, which produced Kenya, Lebanon, Sudan, Sierra Leone,
the Prodi Report. Her latest publication Ivory Coast and Liberia. Her work
is Climate Change and Arab Food in Ethiopia in 1984 inspired Band Aid
Security. and subsequently Live Aid, the biggest
relief programme ever mounted.
Nadia al-Sakkaf has been Editor
in Chief of the Yemen Times since Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland is
2005 and is active with many a former Prime Minister of Norway. Dr Gro Harlem Professor Tony Chan
Brundtland
organisations defending freedom She is now an international leader in
of expression, human rights and sustainable development and public
democracy. She has successfully health. She is also Deputy Chair of
recruited female journalists, who The Elders, and a board member
presently represent half of the of the UN Foundation. Until 2010
staff, a gender balance which is she was a Special Envoy on Climate
an unusual achievement in Yemeni Change for the United Nations
organisations. In 2012 she launched Secretary-General. Dr Brundtland
the FM station Radio Yemen Times, served as the Director General of
the first free platform for public the World Health Organization from
expression. 1998–2003.

Ayo Bamgbose was educated Professor Tony Chan was


at University College, Ibadan and appointed President of Hong Kong
the University of Edinburgh. He is a University of Science and Technology
renowned expert on the importance in 2009. His main research interests
of language as a significant factor are in mathematics, computer science
in the realisation of Millennium and engineering. He is a member of
Development Goals. He is Professor the Board of Trustees of King Abdullah
Emeritus at the University of Ibadan. University of Science and Technology
He was awarded the Nigerian in Saudi Arabia, and the President’s
National Order of Merit in 1990. Advisory Council of the Korea
Advanced Institute of Science
DR TIAN Belawati is Rector of
and Technology.
Universitas Terbuka (Indonesia Open
University). She has been working Dr Heesun Chung is one of the
in the field of distance education world’s leading forensic scientists
since 1985 and is President of the and President of the International
International Council for Open and Association of Forensic Sciences
Distance Education (ICDE). (IAFS). She is currently Dean of
the Graduate School of Analytical
Science and Technology at
Chungnam National University
in Korea, and was recently made
an Honorary cbe.

36
Ariel Dorfman is an Argentine- Dr Paul Kan Man-lok cbe
Chilean-American novelist, playwright, developed the world’s first
essayist, academic, and human rights Chinese and multilingual wireless
activist. A citizen of the United States communication software in 1987,
since 2004, he has been a professor and has been making significant
of literature and Latin American Studies contributions to the IT industry in
at Duke University, in Durham, North both Hong Kong and China for the Ariel Dorfman Dr Lykke Friis
Carolina since 1985. last 40 years. He is currently Chairman
of the Hong Kong Information

© Emeric Lhuisset
Dr Lykke Friis is Pro-Rector
Technology Industry Council and
of Copenhagen University and
of the Hong Kong–UK Business
President of the Danish Foreign
Partnership. In 1990, Dr Kan set up
Policy Society. She was formerly
the educational and culture charity
Minister for Climate and Energy
A Better Tomorrow.
(2009–11) and Minister for Equal
Rights (2010–11) in the Danish Joseph V Melillo has been Dr Seungsoo Han Joseph V Melillo

government. Executive Producer of the Brooklyn


Academy of Music (BAM) in New York
Dr Seungsoo Han is a former
since 1999. He has been honoured
Prime Minister of the Republic of
by the governments of France,
Korea (2008–09), and is Special
Britain, Sweden and Taiwan for his
Envoy for Disaster Risk Reduction
commitment to fostering international
and Water for the UN Secretary-
relations through the arts.
General.
Bruce Onobrakpeya is a Nigerian
Dr Nirmalya Kumar is a member
printmaker, painter and sculptor.
of the Group Executive Council
He has exhibited at the Tate Modern
of Tata Sons and is responsible for
in London, the National Museum
strategy at group level. He was
of African Art of the Smithsonian
previously Professor of Marketing
Institution in Washington DC and the
and Director of the Aditya Birla India
Malmö Konsthall in Sweden. In 2010
Centre at London Business School.
he became the second winner, after
He is regarded as one of the world’s
Chinua Achebe, of the prestigious
leading thinkers on strategy and
Nigerian Creativity Award.
marketing, and his most recent book
is Brand Breakout: How Emerging
Market Brands Will Go Global.

Dr Atia Lawgali is Chairman of the


Libyan National Commission on Civic
Education and served as a Deputy
Minister of Culture and Civil Society
in the Libyan transitional government.
During the revolution, he was a
member of the executive office of
the National Transitional Council.

80 moments that shaped the world  37


Rita Payne is President of the Dr Paul Thompson is the Rector
Commonwealth Journalists Association of the Royal College of Art, the world’s
and editorial director of Global oldest art school in continuous
magazine. She was previously Asia operation, and the only art and design
Editor, BBC World News. She is a university in the UK operating
member of the London executive exclusively at postgraduate level.
committee of the Commonwealth From 2001–09 he was Director Rita Payne Sanjoy Roy
Human Rights Initiative. of Cooper-Hewitt, Smithsonian
Design Museum in New York, and
Sanjoy Roy is a Delhi-based
Director of the Design Museum in
international producer and arts
London from 1993–2001. He is
activist, and the founder and Managing
a Trustee of the Victoria and Albert
Director of Teamwork Arts which has
Museum.
widespread interests in the performing
and visual arts, film and television. Xu Tongwu is an Academician
He runs the Jaipur Literature Festival, of the Chinese Academy of Social Dr Paul Thompson Maung Thura
(‘Zarganar’)
and Teamwork currently designs and Science, the country’s highest
produces arts festivals in 13 countries academic research organisation
around the world. in the fields of philosophy and
social sciences.
Dr Dorothea Rüland is
Secretary-General of the Deutscher Yu Minhong (Michael Yu) is the
Akademischer Austauschdienst founder and Chief Executive of
(DAAD), the German national agency New Oriental Education & Technology
for international academic co- Group Inc. and a member of the central
operation. She has worked in Thailand committee of the China Democratic
and Indonesia, and between 2008 League. In 2006 New Oriental was
and 2010 was Director of the Centre the first Chinese private education
for International Cooperation, Freie company to be listed on the New
Universität Berlin. York Stock Exchange, and by 2010
it was the largest private educational
HRH Princess Maha Chakri
enterprise in China.
Sirindhorn is the second daughter
of the King of Thailand. She is closely MAUNG THURA (‘ZARGANAR’) is a
involved in community and social popular Burmese comedian, film
development in Thailand and actor, and film director as well
elsewhere in South-East Asia. She as a fierce critic and often political
is currently Head of the Department prisoner of the Burmese military
of History of the Chulachomklao Royal government.
Military Academy.

Bongani Tembe is Chief Executive


and Artistic Director of the KwaZulu-
Natal Philharmonic Orchestra and
is widely regarded as one of Africa’s
leading artists and arts administrators.
He studied at the Juilliard School in
New York and the London Business
School.

38
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Contributor
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Acknowledgements Page 22 © Getty – Fayez Nureldine/Staff
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80 Moments That Shaped The World is published by the British Council Page 25 © Getty – Mike Cameron/Staff
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Editor: Mona Lotten Page 30 © The Roslin Institute, The University
of Edinburgh, Roslin, Scotland, UK
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Colm McGivern, Kristen McNicoll, Mark Moulding, Rachel Thomas, Sid Volter Page 33 © Getty – xPACIFICA
Research partner: YouGov Page 34 © Getty – Bruce Yuanyue Bi
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ISBN 978-0-86355-759-0

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for cultural relations and educational opportunities.

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