
A man was given admission to the Japanese World Expo with a solution to a 1940 function that was postponed because of the conflict, according to organisers.
The” Grand International Exposition of Japan” in Tokyo was scheduled for 1938, but the event was postponed indefinitely as a result of Japan’s involvement in World War II.
In a statement, Expo 2025 organizers in the northern city of Osaka announced that they had made the decision to accept 1940 eventgoers after the opening of Expo 2025 last month and until mid-October.
According to the speech, they exchanged one of the worn-out cards for two one-day Expo 2025 runs on Monday.
Fumiya Takenawa, 25, who lives in Tokyo but was visiting his parents ‘ home in Osaka, was reported as the 1940 ticket holder.
Takenawa, a collection of expo-related paraphernalia, reported that he purchased the 1940 ticket online in March, according to the Mainichi Shimbun everyday and other stores.
They published a photo of him grinning and holding up the old seat, which has an elaborate red and black style.
The Eiffel Tower was inaugurated at London’s 1851 Crystal Palace museum, and the Expo or World’s Fair, which is now held every five years in various places, started with the 1851 show there.
Past Expos in Japan– Osaka in 1970 and Aichi in 2005– had policies similar to those that gave “invitation tickets” to attendees who had passes for the 1940 event, according to Expo 2025 organisers on Monday.
Takenawa apparently enjoyed the enormous, white and red” Tower of the Sun,” which is the centerpiece of the 1970 Osaka Expo and is still housed in a park in the city. – Agency