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An underwhelming outbreak at the Nehru Centre

The latest exhibition at Nehru Centre is pertinent, but it's best to manage your expectations

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The exhibition marks the 100th anniversary of the Spanish Flu. Picture for representational purpose

The exhibition marks the 100th anniversary of the Spanish Flu. Picture for representational purpose

On Wednesday evening, taking the mic at the Nehru Science Centre, Dr Ashish K. Jha discussed his travel schedules for a week. It spanned, Boston, Hong Kong, New Delhi and Mumbai. In a short sentences, the director of Harvard Global Health Institute, USA, explained how easy it is in today's world to transport a disease from one corner of the world to the other.

This is the heart of the fortnight-long exhibition titled Outbreak: Epidemics in a Connected World. But the first glance at the exhibition, set up in association with the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History (NMNH), USA, in collaboration with Harvard Global Health Institute (HGHI), USA, is a bit underwhelming. For starters, within the science centre it's placed in a corner at the rear that stinks of the washrooms next to it. More importantly, what seemed — thanks to the names associated with it — like it would be a state-of-the art exhibition turned out to be nothing more than three rows of exhibition boards, discussing (only in English) various epidemics right from the HIV/AIDS virus to Ebola. The exhibition marks the 100th anniversary of the Spanish Flu, a pandemic that took the lives of 50 to 100 million people between 3 and 5 per cent of the world's population at that time. India, too, has been a victim of this catastrophic disease outbreak loosing 10 to 15 million lives.

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