Europe’s 19th-century mummy mania, Paris’s finest tailors and cobblers, and gin from Singapore’s Atlas bar.
Wednesday 21/1/26
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Good morning from Midori House. For more news and views – including live reporting from Nuuk, Davos and Paris – tune in to Monocle Radio. Here’s what’s coming up in today’s Monocle Minute:

THE OPINION: Trump’s show of bad faith in Davos 
FASHION: Where to mend your clothes during Paris Fashion Week
DAILY TREAT: Toast to Atlas bar’s dry gin
FROM MONOCLE.COM: Europe’s 19th-century mummy mania


The Opinion: AFFAIRS

Playing God in Davos: Why the US is putting faith centre stage

By Carlota Rebelo
<em>By Carlota Rebelo</em>

Things are getting icy in Davos. Despite only touching down at the World Economic Forum (WEF) later this morning, US president Donald Trump has been dominating discussions along the Promenade all week. Shortly before departing Washington, private texts between Trump, Norway’s prime minister and France’s president went public. Soon afterward, the US president published an AI-generated photo of himself seated before Europe’s leaders with a map showing the US flag over Greenland, Canada and Venezuela. Most of those leaders will be at the conference – Norway’s Jonas Gahr Støre announced that he would attend after the messages were revealed. It’s safe to say that the president is in for a frosty reception.
 
Alongside the US president comes a 300-strong entourage composed of cabinet officials, advisors, business partners and family members, all hoping to spread the gospel of American patriotism to business tycoons, political leaders and WEF veterans. Team USA’s international outing comes as the country’s 250th anniversary celebrations begin to ramp up, so its chosen command centre in Switzerland had to befit the occasion. USA House has set up shop at Davos’s English Church, poignantly renamed “The Sanctuary” for the duration of WEF. While it’s not the first time that the church has been used during the summit, it’s impossible not to note the irony behind the choice of venue – a place built for shelter, comfort and guidance will now house a nation that’s threatening allies, disrupting the status quo and generally relishing the chaos that it causes. 

Preaching to the choir: Trump prays with faith leaders in the White House

Inside the church, a packed programme of talks and discussions focuses on faith and leadership. Outside, the façade is adorned with banners that read “Freedom 250”. It’s a manifestation of the White House’s America First policy, a holier-than-thou attempt at asserting global dominance. Perhaps if a delegation from George Washington’s administration came to Davos 250 years ago, the politicking would look similarly pious. 
 
It’s not news that Trump is a president who knows how to appeal to conservative Christians, a core part of his support within the Republican party. He has established faith-based entities and launched a programme urging Americans to pray for their country. And who can forget that group of faith leaders praying around him while he sat at the Resolute desk? But divine messaging on the global stage, in such a secular setting, is a surprise.
 
When I stopped by a session on faith and leadership that started at 07.15 local time, the queue to get in went around the building. A panel of speakers discussed the role that faith has played in both their personal lives and how it can help to foster unity. “People came to the US because of freedom of religion,” says Keith Krach, the CEO of Freedom 250, who Trump appointed to lead the organisation in charge of anniversary celebrations. “You can see in history that Abraham Lincoln led on his faith, that 9/11 brought people together because of their faith. And when we look back at this anniversary year and the next 250 years, faith is going to play even a bigger role.” Nobody had the heart to tell Krach that people are losing faith with the US more than ever. Among the pews in the 19th-century church, lit in shades of red and blue, you had to wonder whether a Catholic confessional would have been more appropriate. 

Carlota Rebelo is Monocle’s senior foreign correspondent. For our live coverage from Davos, tune in to ‘The Briefing’ on Monocle Radio.


 

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The Briefings

fashion: france

In Paris for fashion week? Stop by the city’s best tailors and cobblers

Paris Fashion Week is under way (writes Julia Webster Ayuso). Are you all put together or are you having some sort of wardrobe malfunction? Perhaps you need your loafers buffed or a new button sewn on? Fortunately, there is a healthy supply of skilled tailors and cobblers in the capital. Preserving these businesses is a citywide effort: local authorities offer them lower rents and last autumn the government also introduced legislation to incentivise Parisians to visit workshops more frequently. Since 2023, people have been able to claim back up to €25 of the cost of mending clothes and shoes in studios that have joined a repair bonus scheme run by eco-organisation Refashion. 

All this is a reflection of the city’s commitment to preserving its craft traditions and many Parisians’ desire to keep fast fashion at arm’s length. Here, Monocle meets some of the capital’s finest tailors and master cobblers bringing your clothes back to life. Try this one on for size.

Life and sole: Antoine Rondeau gives these shoes a fresh shine

L’Atelier d’Antoine
Nantes-born Antoine Rondeau’s passion for footwear has made him one of the city’s most sought-after cobblers. The loyal customers stepping through the door of his bright-yellow shopfront have included many famous Parisians committed to extending the lifespans of their footwear.

After training under a master bootmaker and then honing his craft in Spain and the UK, Rondeau returned to Paris and worked for renowned footwear labels John Lobb and Berluti.

In 1996 he opened his own shop on Rue de Miromesnil and built a reputation as one of the city’s most skilled cobblers, particularly when it comes to reassembly. Rondeau can take shoes apart and restore them piece by piece.

The bigger the challenge, the better. “I’m quite meticulous; I like everything that involves finishing,” he says. “Precision is something that I enjoy and people recognise that.” He also offers free postal delivery – a rare and valuable service that is appreciated by his busy clients.
75 Rue de Miromesnil, 75008

Get your fix: The repair shops giving Parisians’ wardrobes a fresh start


• • • • • DAILY TREAT • • • • •

Toast to Atlas bar’s dry gin

When it opened in 2017, Atlas bar in Singapore quickly established itself as one of the world’s leading gin destinations, with its towering 1,300-bottle collection, gilded balconies and art deco frescoes.

Now the bar has launched its own bottle of gin. Crafted for cocktails, it brims with notes of juniper, orange, lavender, coriander and roasted almonds, rounded out with vetiver for a dry, grassy finish.
atlasbar.sg


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Beyond the headlines

FROM MONOCLE.COM: egypt

Inside 19th-century mummy mania, when Europe dined with Egypt’s dead


On 15 January 1834, London’s Royal College of Surgeons invited the public to a special event, where renowned surgeon and antiquities expert Thomas Pettigrew gave a lecture on ancient Egypt and unwrapped a real mummy (writes Till Hein). All in the name of science, of course.

Casket case: Mummies captured the Victorian imagination

Such presentations soon became fashionable in France, Germany and particularly in Victorian Britain. Members of polite society who considered it improper for women to remove their gloves in public watched with delight as the wrappings fell away and the naked body of a millennia-old corpse was revealed to them. Thomas “Mummy” Pettigrew became a star of the unwrapping scene. At first, he performed his shows in university lecture halls and later at dinner parties. The combination of morbid eroticism, education, Egyptian romanticism and shiver-inducing entertainment fascinated aristocrats and wealthy bourgeois alike.
 
To unravel the full mystery surrounding Europe’s mummy obsession, click here.