As U.S. presidential power has grown, its ripple effects have gone far beyond politics, reaching into all aspects of American society.
There鈥檚 something about building walls that can make people just want to build bridges.
Not always, of course. Nations have聽long erected barriers, blocking outsiders or separating neighbors. And they鈥檙e doing it more frequently: When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, there were 15 such barriers globally. By 2018,聽.听
But a brief moment in 2019 spoke to another possibility. On a bright July day, three hot pink seesaws pierced the U.S. border wall between Ciudad Ju谩rez, Mexico, and El Paso, Texas. The installation quickly drew children and adults eager to override the separation of a foreboding wall with the connections forged on a playground, if only for an hour. And last week, in London,聽
Perhaps that was because it reminded us that walls don鈥檛 have to block the vision that can bring them down. In Belfast, Northern Ireland, Protestant and Catholic residents living along some decades-old barriers continue to support them to prevent a return to searing conflict. But in one neighborhood, the decision to engage in a three-year trust-building process led to the聽聽of what a spokesman called a 鈥減hysical and mental barrier鈥 in 2016.
As for the Teeter-Totter Wall installation? It 鈥渞esonated with people around the world in a way that we didn鈥檛 anticipate," said Virginia San Fratello, one of its two designers. "[Most] people are excited about being together, and about optimism and about possibility and the future."