The exposition opened on 6 May 1931 in the
Bois de Vincennes on the eastern outskirts of Paris. The scale was enormous. It is estimated that from 7 to 9 million visitors came from over the world. The French government brought people from the colonies to Paris and had them create native arts and crafts and perform in grandly scaled reproductions of their native architectural styles such as huts or temples. Other nations participated in the event, including the
Netherlands,
Belgium,
Italy (with a pavilion designed by
Armando Brasini),
Japan,
Portugal, and the
United States.Politically, France hoped the exposition would paint its colonial empire in a beneficial light, showing the mutual exchange of cultures and the benefit of France's efforts overseas. This would thus negate
German criticisms that France was "the
exploiter of colonial societies [and] the agent of
miscegenation and
decadence". The exposition highlighted the endemic cultures of the colonies and downplayed French efforts to spread its own language and culture abroad, thus advancing the notion that France was associating with colonised societies, not
assimilating them. The Colonial Exposition provided a forum for the discussion of colonialism in general and of French colonies specifically. French authorities published over 3,000 reports during the six-month period and held over 100 congresses. The exposition served as a vehicle for colonial writers to publicise their works, and it created a market in Paris for various ethnic cuisines, particularly
North African and
Vietnamese. Filmmakers chose French colonies as the subjects of their works. The
Permanent Colonial Museum (today the Cité nationale de l'histoire de l'immigration) opened at the end of the exposition. The colonial service experienced a boost in applications. 26 territories of the empire participated in the
Colonial Exposition Issue of
postage stamps issued in conjunction with the Exposition. == The Palestine Pavilion ==