INT21
International/Lifestyle/BusinessBata
Shoe Museum fetes its millionth visitorToronto, Sep 25 IANS The world-
famous Bata
Shoe Museum, in the
heart of Toronto, welcomed its one millionth visitor this week. Ernie and Winsome Nunn from
Australia were greeted by
museum founder-chairperson Sonja Bata and others when the couple entered the premises.Sonja Bata, the widow of Thomas Bata who died early this month at the age of 93, said: "We are extremely excited to be reaching this wonderful milestone. This success speaks volumes of the Bata
Shoe Museum's contribution to Toronto and other countries". Nunn, a retired chemistry professor, and his wife - who are currently on a world
trip - were taken aback when they were told that they were the special guests of the
museum. The couple got a life-long
family membership of the
museum, as well as a large
gift basket and vouchers for new
shoes. They were also given an exclusive behind-the-scenes
tour of the
museum.The four-storeyed
museum exhibits more than 10,000 pairs of rare
shoes, collected by the Bata couple since 1940s when Thomas Bata took over the
company after his father's
death. To
house their growing
collection, the couple first established the Bata
Shoe Museum Foundation in 1979.In 1995, they opened the
museum with four impressive
galleries, displaying Chinese bound
foot shoes, ancient Egyptian
sandals, chestnut-crushing clogs and beautiful platforms. The semi-permanent exhibition "
All About Shoes" tracks 4,500-year
history of
shoe-making and has a
collection of 20th-century
celebrity shoes. These include
diamond-studded slippers of the Nizam of
Hyderabad, worth $140,000, and pony-skin boots of Picasso. The 114-year-old Bata
Shoe Company, which was established by Thomas Bata's father in the then Czechoslovakia in 1894, operates in more than 50
countries, claiming to serve one million
customers globally each day. It employs over 40,000
people around the world.--Indo-Asian
News Servicegs/pb/jg321
Words25091103