December 25th, 2023
We had a wonderful day and we hope you all did too.
The weather was beautiful and we had a potluck in the desert – Thanks to Larry and Peg for hosting.
We finished the evening with a campfire!
What a great day.
Mom, Bob, Larry, Peg, Allen (don’t know where Andy was?):
December 26, 2023
For years, as we traveled west into California, we would see this church on a huge hill and a few signs advertising the Center of the World and the World History in Granite.
So today we finally visited.
A little information from Roadside America:
“Drive just west of the border between Arizona and southern California, and stop in the Sonoran Desert (from December to March is optimal). Step inside the pyramid. Stand on the metal disk.
The Center of the World disk.
Jacques-Andre Istel has officially established the Center of the World here, and he has built a town around it to bolster his claim. He's the mayor. That's his signature on the official certificate you receive for standing at the Center of the World.
Jacques-Andre saw this barren wasteland while serving as a Marine in the Korean War. He fell in love with it, and, with money made from his successful parachute schools business, bought thousands of acres stretching from I-8 northward to the Chocolate Mountains. "I told my wife, 'I don't know what I'm going to do with this bare land, but it has to be entertaining,'" he said. It wasn't until the 1980s that he finally found an idea that piqued his interest, one that has now left a permanent impression on the landscape.
First, Jacques-Andre wrote a children's book that helped convince Imperial County, California, to legally recognize a spot on his property as the official Center of the World (it is also recognized as such by the Institut Geographique National of France). Next, he had the town of Felicity incorporated, naming it after his wife, Felicia Lee. "To our knowledge, it's the first town in America named for a Chinese lady," he said. "'Felicity' means 'happiness, culture.'" An election was held, and Jacques-Andre became the first (and thus far only) mayor of Felicity by a unanimous vote of 3 to 0. In case you're wondering who cast the third vote, Mayor Istel told us that it was the invisible dragon in his book, a vote recognized by a justice of the peace and the chairman of the Imperial County Board of Supervisors for the only time in California history.
The Mayor needed a way to mark his Center. Felicia had the idea: "It's in the desert, why not a pyramid?" Jacques-Andre was delighted, and had a 21-foot-tall, hollow, mirror-lined, pink granite pyramid built over The Spot, which is a dot in the center of a bronze disk set into the pyramid's floor. Placing your toe on the spot is an occasion for ceremony in Felicity, with a town official recording the exact moment on your certificate and ordering you to make an obligatory wish.
Other landmarks in Felicity reflect the eclectic tastes of the Istels. A sculpture of God's arm -- from Michelangelo's Dawn of Creation painting in the Sistine Chapel -- acts as a sundial; a metal 25-foot-high spiral staircase salvaged from the Eiffel Tower stands near the parking lot.
The Mayor next decided to build a church for his town -- but first he needed a hilltop for it. "I'm not particularly religious," he told us, "but if you're going to build a House of God, it's got to be on the highest spot." Jacques-Andre had 150,000 tons of earth trucked in and piled up into what he calls the Hill of Prayer (engineered to earthquake Zone 4 specifications). On top of it he had built what he calls The Church on the Hill at Felicity, which is modeled after one that he likes in Brittany.
With blazing white windowless walls and an aquamarine door, the church stands out against the otherwise dun-colored landscape. Jacques-Andre had it dedicated to St. Felicity by Protestant and Catholic clergy in 2008. "The other St. Felicity, not this one," he says, gesturing toward his wife and quietly chuckling.
The Center of the World has become "the central point for memories" for Jacques-Andre's longest-running and most serious project, The World Commemorative Center at Felicity. Everyone just calls it The Museum of History in Granite. On a series of two-inch-thick granite walls -- long, two-sided wedges -- Jacques-Andre is having inscribed everything that he thinks is worth telling future generations. Phase One consists of a hundred monuments stretching over a third of a mile. The Master Plan shows that the walls will eventually form a fish-shaped outline that encloses the Church and extends beyond, with its tail at the Pyramid and its nose way, way out toward the distant hills.
Jacques-Andre insists that we watch a video that will explain everything. "This town, dedicated to remembrance, fulfills our mission to unveil the planet's highlights of the collective family of humanity," the voice-over tells us. "Preserving memory is the noble concept." Okay, that really didn't help us much, but the video does provide a crash course to those who wonder what's going on here….
We walk out onto the field of memories to see for ourselves. One long wall recounts the history of French aviation. You'll learn more about the "primary role" of France in the development of manned flight than you would in an aviation museum in France. There are panels on Franco-military action in World War II and French Vietnam, and photo-realistic depictions etched into the stone of parades at the Arc de Triomphe.
There's a United States Marine Corps Korean War Memorial monument -- Jacques is a Marine Lt. Colonel -- and a series of eight monuments devoted to The History of Humanity. Jacques-Andre tells us with pride that one wall uses a quote from Groucho Marx to explain Aristotle, and that as a result "some very distinguished French philosophers will not speak with me." French speakers might be slightly pleased that on a couple of rows of monuments, everything is labeled in French and English -- with French at the top.
Visitors to the Official Center of the World can be part of another wall, named the Wall For The Ages. It's open to anyone who wants to have engraved on it his or her name, or anyone else's, for $300, partly tax-deductible. "The ultimate Who's Who," Jacques-Andre calls it.
The World Commemorative Center is incomplete at the moment, but it's only in Phase One. The video voice-over told us that, "We hope that thousands of walls will be built by our successors." They will have to think before they write, as the walls are engineered to last 4,000 years and become "the one book that survives."
By design, Felicity still has just a couple of residents and the only grass lawn in the area. There are no billboards for the Center of the World, the restaurant here is only open four hours a day, and the Center itself is only open from December through March, when the outside temperature won't kill you.
Jacques-Andre told us that people sometimes see the Church from the interstate, pull off at the brown, "Felicity: Center of the World Plaza" sign, and mistakenly think that they've arrived at some kind of cult. But Jacques-Andre said that the visitors who appreciate it "are extremely nice people to have around, and so they make us quite happy." If he is on the grounds, the Mayor will greet and quickly charm any visitors.
Jolly spirits seem to be the norm at The Center of the World. Mayor Jacques and his Felicia are no longer young, but they're having too much fun at present to think about retiring from their desert haven, which they intend to pass on to kindred spirits when they eventually exit (possibly to the Center of the Universe).
"Life consists of both the serious and whimsical," Jacques-Andre said.”
I know that was long but I do have pictures:
Our first tour guide showing us the sundial - A sculpture of God's arm -- from Michelangelo's Dawn of Creation painting in the Sistine Chapel:
Then we were guided to the pyramid:
Where we found the official Center of the World and a new tour guide who was so friendly and positive.
She told us we had to stand on the circle, face the church and make a wish but don’t tell anyone – LOL!:
Then we had to make a heart with the church in the center:
And lastly, we had to look very excited to be here – she was just so cute!:
Yes, we did get our certificate at the end of the tour – LOL!
The Pyramid Building opens up to the Museum of History in Granite and the Church on the Hill:
When this bell was installed, they had a ceremony with representatives of the thirteen original colonies:
The view of the complex from the top of the church stairs:
The church is beautiful:
I walked the area of the granite inscriptions – there is a little of everything.
Here are a few that I found very interesting. (Did not know about the Toba Eruption.)
Abraham is the patriarch of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam:
The advances our country has made since 1776:
Inflation and the National Debt since 1940 – very scary!:
Immigrants and Immigration:
This says it all!:
Tides and Currents of the world – I did not know about Sargasso Sea off our east coast.
A beautiful memorial to the Marines who lost their lives in the Korean War:
This was a maze of walls where you can have a picture engraved on the wall:
A section of the spiral staircase from the Eiffel Tower:
The overall view:
It is a little quirky but we had fun! Yes, I would recommend a stop - It is $10/person to tour.
From there we went to In-N-Out Burger for “lupper”. We have not been to one since we left in the spring and it was yummy!
After a few other stops, we were back home and enjoyed the rest of the evening.
Enjoy today!
2 comments:
I found your photos really told the story. Apparently, great tour guides promoted those poses! I drive near there every year and never knew it existed. Thanks for sharing.
Judy, Thank you. It is worth a stop if you have the time. When you are inn Yuma in Feb., if you have a couple hours free - it is about 15 minutes away. Enjoy and see you in Q.
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