


A city known for its “arts, culture and innovation” will host a special light festival to celebrate and unite its different communities.
Hosted by Milton Keynes Islamic Arts & Culture (MKIAC), the theme of this year’s City of Codes and Light festival is Constellations of Stars: Echoes Across the Sky.
The group was started in 2002 in response to the September 11 terror attacks in New York, to “overcome societal division”, it said.
Anouar Kassim, its founder and creative director, said: “The importance of community cohesion and integration is more valid now than ever before.”
The free event, for all ages, will celebrate the work of Islamic astronomers like al-Sufi and Ali Qushji, and visitors could experience the night sky as a collective story that spans cultures and generations, its organisers said.
Every year it has a different theme, and its first event in 2019 linked the work of Bletchley Park’s mathematician, Alan Turing, with Islamic art.
“Pure mathematics and algebra derived from that civilisation, so it linked beautifully,” Mr Kassim said.
The first event of 2025 will be held later at Bletchley Park.
On Saturday, a large-scale projection by multimedia creative studio Limbic Cinema will illuminate the city library with the story of astronomy, tracing a journey from ancient stargazers to modern discovery, followed by a lantern parade.
Mr Kassim said: “People love what we do because it’s about innovation, it’s about technology, it’s about education, it’s about STEAM – science, technology, engineering, maths, art.
“Milton Keynes is known as a city of creativity, culture and innovation.
“It’s a celebratory event that unifies all society together on an autumn evening.
“It’s a moment to look up, together, and rethink our place in the universe.”
The festival runs until 22 October and culminates in a series of Centre:MK workshops, designed to inspire young people through coding, mathematics, and critical thinking.
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