#Holiday 14 Days Sri Lanka
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larimar · 1 month ago
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nasa
Behold: a full moon worthy of the Halloween season. The Hunter’s Moon!⁣ ⁣ According to the Farmer’s Almanac, this month’s full moon coincides with deer hunting season. This Hunter’s Moon is extra special this year because it is also a supermoon, which means that the full moon occurs when the Moon is closest to Earth in its elliptical orbit.⁣ ⁣ At its closest point, the full moon can appear up to 14 percent bigger and 30 percent brighter than the faintest Moon of the year, which occurs when it’s farthest from Earth in its orbit. Even though 14 percent doesn’t make a big difference in detectable size, a full supermoon is a bit brighter than other moons throughout the year.⁣ ⁣ This full moon is also important to lots of different cultures across the world. As the full moon in the Hebrew month of Tishrei, this full moon falls near the start of Sukkoth, a seven-day holiday starting on the fifteenth day of the month. For Hindus, this is Sharad Purnima, also known as Kumara Purnima, Kojagari Purnima, Navanna Purnima Kojagrat Purnima, or Kaumudi Purnima. For Buddhists, this full moon marks the end of Vassa, the three-month period of fasting for monks tied to the monsoons. In Myanmar, this full moon corresponds with the three-day Thadingyut Festival of Lights, also known as the Lighting Festival of Myanmar. In Sri Lanka, this is Vap Poya, which is followed by the Kathina festival, during which people give gifts to the monks.⁣ ⁣ Keep an eye on the sky for the next couple of days, as the Moon will appear full through the morning of Friday, Oct. 18.⁣
Image description: The full moon glows bright gold in the top left of the image. The full moon stands out against a hazy, purple sky. In the lower right corner, a snowy peak can be glimpsed, bathed in dark red light.⁣ ⁣ Credit: NASA⁣
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girlactionfigure · 1 month ago
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🇮🇱SRI LANKA TRAVEL WARNING, POLICE DRAMA - Real time from Israel  
ISRAEL REALTIME - Connecting to Israel in Realtime
( VIDEO - The remains of Kfar Kila, a southern Lebanese near-border Hezbollah village that also acted as a major launch site. )
✡️Tonight is SIMCHAT TORAH starts tonight, where we celebrate with the Torah!  Chag Samayach, a joyful holiday!
.. Several rabbis have noted: How can we celebrate when this war started on this holiday last year?  When so many fell, so many remain hostages, so many are fighting and so many have given their lives in our defense?  
They answer: very much in the name of the fallen, in the name of the hostages, in the name of the Jewish people and those who have sacrificed, WE WILL NOT ALLOW THE ENEMY to destroy our holiday, to destroy our joy and celebration.  
AM YISROEL CHAI, the Jewish people live!  We will celebrate, we will win, we will honor their sacrifice.
✡️As a Jewish holy-day, we DO NOT POST news from sundown for 26 hours unless there is a LIFE THREATENING EMERGENCY.
⚠️ISRAEL NATIONAL SECURITY TRAVEL WARNING.. calls on the Israelis to immediately leave the Arugam Bay area and the coastal area in the south and west of Sri Lanka due to terror threat to Israeli tourists, following a warning about a terrorist squad of the Revolutionary Guards mission in the area.
⚠️ HOME FRONT COMMAND - - if you find rocket or drone debris during holiday outdoor activity, DO NOT TOUCH IT - contact Home Front (dial 104) or the Police (dial 100).  The parts may be dangerous or toxic, or be important for security.
♦️LEBANON - TZUR-TYRE.. Civil Defense in Tyre walks the streets of the city and asks citizens through loudspeakers to evacuate immediately.  The Civil Defense closed the entrances to the city of Tyre to prevent entry.  Heavy IDF attacks.
♦️LEBANON - (enemy reports) Dozens of IDF air force attacks on more than 20 villages and towns in Lebanon.
🔹IRANIAN TERROR PROPAGANDA.. a new mural in the center of Tehran: No (Israeli) hostage will be released.
🔹HOUTHIS CLEAR THEIR PORT?  Houthi leader Abdel Malik al Houthi issued an urgent order to the owners of the containers in the port to clear out the Hodediah port, immediately.  ???
🔹GERMANY SAYS.. German Foreign Minister: Israel succeeded in weakening Hezbollah to a great extent, and the task now is to reach an effective diplomatic solution.
🔹US INTEL AIRCRAFT.. The US is operating reconnaissance aircraft in the Persian Gulf to monitor the movements of Iranian surface-to-surface missiles.
🔹US SEC STATE GOES TO SAUDI ARABIA.. from Israel.  Riyadh: The American Secretary of State in Lincoln met with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan, and talked with them about "the developments in Gaza and Lebanon"
▪️ON ISRAEL APPROVING THE NEW COVID VACCINE.. I received significant STRONG negative feedback about the Israel Min. Of Health approving and bringing into the fall vaxx schedule the new COVID vaccine.  It has become ridiculously difficult to determine the facts around COVID vaccines, and I can only advise to consult with a trusted medical professional before taking this vaccine, and there are categories of people who should clearly avoid it such as men under 30.
.. Israel no longer has public COVID testing, COVID (and flu, and both together, and strep - quick test kits are available at pharmacies), so there is no case rate data.
.. The last info I can find on COVID in Israel is 14 cases hospitalized in June, all seniors with other health problems. This is the “from COVID or with COVID” argument, and the article seems to state “with”.
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prapasara · 4 months ago
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Songkran History
Songkran History
History of Songkran Festival [ENG Ver.]
Thai New Year or Songkran (Thai: เทศกาลสงกรานต์, pronounced [tʰêːt.sā.kāːn sǒŋ.krāːn]) is the Thai New Year's national holiday. Songkran is on 13 April every year, but the holiday period extends from 14 to 15 April. In 2018 the Thai cabinet extended the festival nationwide to seven days, 9–16 April, to enable citizens to travel home for the holiday.  In 2019, the holiday was observed 9–16 April as 13 April fell on a Saturday.  The word "Songkran" comes from the Sanskrit word saṃkrānti,  literally "astrological passage", meaning transformation or change. It coincides with the rising of Aries on the astrological chart  and with the New Year of many calendars of Southeast and South Asia, in keeping with the Buddhist and Hindu Calendar. The New Year takes place at around the same time as the new year celebrations of many regions of South Asia like China (Dai people of Yunnan Province), India, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, Nepal, and Sri Lanka.
In Thailand, New Year is now officially celebrated 1 January. Songkran was the official New Year until 1888, when it was switched to a fixed date of 1 April. Then in 1940, this date was shifted to 1 January. The traditional Thai New Year Songkran was transformed into a national holiday.  Celebrations are famous for the public water fights framed as ritual cleansing. This had become quite popular among Thai and foreigners.
Meaning
Songkran is a term derived from Sanskrit संक्रान्ति saṅkrānti meaning 'to move' or 'movement'. It derives from the movement of the sun from one position to another in the zodiac. According to its literal meaning in Sanskrit, a Songkran occurs every month. However, the period that Thai people refer to as Songkran happens when the sun moves from Pisces to Aries in the zodiac. The correct name for this period should actually be Maha Songkran ('great Songkran) because it coincides with the arrival of a New Year. The Songkran festival is, therefore, a celebration of the New Year in accordance with the solar calendar. The celebration covers a period of three days: 13 April is regarded as Maha Songkran, the day that the sun moves into Aries on the zodiac or the last day of the old year. The next day, 14 April is called Wan Nao, the transitional day between the old and the new years, and 15 April is called Wan Thaloeng Sok (Thai: วันเถลิงศก 'to begin a new era or year'), New Year's day itself.
Songkran Water Festival (Chainese Version)
Songkran Water Festival (Russian Version)
Songkran water Festival (Malay Version)
Songkran Water Festival (Korean Version)
Songkran Water Festival (Japanese Version)
Songkran Water Festival (German Version)
Songkran Water Festival (French Version)
Discover Amazing Stories | History of Songkran Festival [ENG Ver.]
Songkran : The journey from ancient water festival to UNESCO cultural heritage
UNESCO announced its decision from Botswana on Wednesday afternoon, Thai time, while events to mark the new honour will take place in Bangkok on Thursday.
Songkran is celebrated from April 13 to 15 each year to mark the traditional Thai New Year. The festival is known for its water-splashing traditions, which symbolise cleansing and purification. However, Songkran is also a time for paying respect to elders, giving alms to monks, and enjoying traditional Thai food and music.
Next year, the Pheu Thai-led government plans to stretch celebrations throughout the whole of April to promote the festival as Thailand’s soft power.
Songkran has a colourful past, which some scholars believe is rooted in an ancient Hindu festival marking the harvest season and the arrival of the new year.
This festival, called Makara Sankranti, celebrated the sun's entrance into the water sign of Aquarius, marking a new astrological period.
The water element, significant in both Hinduism and Buddhism, played a central role in rituals like making sacrifices to deities and the symbolic washing away of sins.
The festival was adopted by the Khmer Empire, which ruled parts of present-day Thailand, around the 11th century.
According to the traditional Thai calendar, the first new moon day of the fifth month is regarded as New Year’s Day. It normally falls on April 13.
Thais regarded Songkran as New Year's Day until 1889, when King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) switched the date to April 1. In 1941, the first day of the year was moved to January 1 by Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram’s government, to match the Western Gregorian Calendar. The Thai traditional New Year switched back to April 13, to be celebrated with a three-day Songkran holiday.
Under the Khmer empire, people bathed under the sun as they believed it helped cleanse the soul of bad karma and freed the spirits of dead ancestors to return to their homeland. This belief was apparently later attributed to the water element in Songkran celebrations.
As Theravada Buddhism flourished in Thailand, Songkran took on new dimensions.
The focus shifted towards merit-making, with people offering food and prayers to monks at temples.
This tradition, called "tam bun", remains an essential part of traditional New Year celebrations today.
During the Ayutthaya Kingdom (1350-1767), Songkran became an elaborate royal ceremony.
The king led processions, offered symbolic gifts to Buddha statues, and participated in the "Washing of the Buddha" ritual. No water splashing took place in those days.
The washing ritual, where people pour water over Buddha images to purge impurities, is still practised widely.
Millions who study or work outside their home provinces grab the opportunity of the three-day holiday to travel home to their families. April 14 is also called Family Day. The government often extends the holiday period by one or two days, creating a long weekend to promote tourism. But the exodus of people, coupled with partying, also leads to a spike in road accidents each year.
Water splashing takes centre stage at Songkran these days, with water guns in all shapes and sizes filling the shelves in shops.
The roots of this tradition are a mystery, though. Culture scholar Sujit Wongthet believes the water fights were encouraged and adopted in modern times to promote tourism.
He notes that a poem about Songkran written during the reign of King Rama III makes no mention of water splashing.
Some scholars believe that water splashing began after King Chulalongkorn began celebrating Thai New Year in 1989.
Today, Songkran is a vibrant celebration of tradition, family, and community whose significance has now earned UNESCO recognition.
People visit temples, offer alms, sprinkle water on their elders to show respect, and engage in joyous water battles symbolising cleansing and renewal.
The gentler side of the festival sees people anointing the hands of their parents, grandparents and seniors with scented water to seek their blessing for the new year.
Many families, especially those in the Northeast, make merit for deceased relatives or ancestors.
Local authorities and shopping malls set up spaces for the public to pour scented water on Buddha images to seek blessing.
Some temples invite worshippers to carry sand into their grounds for future building construction. Many Buddhists believe the practice brings prosperity, hoping that money pours into their pockets to match the amount of sand they carry.
Another traditional New Year activity is the releasing of captive animals. Worshippers buy fish and caged birds to free on Songkran Day, hoping that this act of compassion will wipe away their bad luck.
Songkran's journey from ancient to modern times reflects Thailand's history and culture, weaving together ancient customs, religious beliefs, and a zest for life. The festival is testament to the enduring power of tradition and the joy of celebrating new beginnings And as world intangible heritage, it is here to stay.
The history of Songkran – all you need to know about Thai New Year
What is Songkran?
Songkran is the largest and most famous festival in Thailand and marks the start of Thai New Year. For younger people it is perhaps best known for its large-scale water fights (or at least it was until the pandemic) but is also known for its traditional water blessing ceremonies. An important event in the Buddhist calendar, Thais will also use the Songkran holidays as an opportunity to return home and spend time with their families.
When is Songkran?
Originally, the Songkran festival’s date was determined by astronomy, but now, the official date, Songkran takes place is April 13-15. However, depending on the province, celebrations can continue for a week, sometimes longer. Pre-COVID, the Songkran celebrations in places such as Pattaya and Chiang Mai can often take place for up to seven days and longer.
What are the origins of Songkran?
The word Songkran is from a Sanskrit word that means passing or moving and is a metaphor for relocating the zodiac imprint or entering the New Year. Songkran was originally Thailand’s New Year’s Day, and signified the start of the Thai calendar. Between 1888 and 1940, Songkran and New Year’s Day in Thailand was celebrated on April 1 but was later changed to April 13-15, when January 1 became synchronized across the world as New Year’s Day.
Where else is Songkran celebrated?
Other than in Thailand, Songkran is celebrated in Laos, Cambodia, Burma, the Tai ethnic minority of Vietnam, and in China’s Yunnan province as well as in Sri Lanka and other eastern Indian countries. The Songkran festival is culturally rooted in India’s Holi festival. The Holi festival uses a splash of color instead and is celebrated in March.
How is Songkran celebrated in Thailand?
Water is a central element to Songkran and traditionally people would sprinkle water on one another as a way to cool down during the peak of the Thai summer season. Today, that has escalated somewhat to large scale water throwing celebrations where people use buckets and water pistols to soak anyone within reach. Appreciation of family and elders is also an important part of Songkran. More traditionally, people will mix clean water, fresh flowers, or garlands to pour over the hands of their parents, grandparents or other elderly family members or neighbors.
What are some traditional activities that Thai people do on Songkran?
With COVID-19 preventative measures putting a temporary halt to water throwing, people in Thailand will be opting for more traditional celebrations this Songkran, such as:
Making merit : Many Thai people will visit a temple during Songkran to make merit and pay their respects to people who have passed away. This type of merit-making is frequently planned ahead of time by bringing food to the temple pavilion to offer to the monks.
Sand pagoda work : After making merit, some people may build sand pagodas at their local temples. The building of pagodas is a religious Thai tradition that highlights teamwork among residents who work together to build the pagodas.
Releasing fish and birds : People will release fish and birds at their local temple as a form of making merit. Releasing the animals from the confines of a cage or giving them freedom is meant to signify a cleansing of the sins or a means of eliminating misfortune to bring happiness and comfort.
Pouring water on an adult or elderly person : This is a mark of respect for adults such as parents, teachers and other respected people. Water is poured on the hands of the person who will then bless the individual who is pouring the water.
Bathing the Buddha : Bathing images or statues of Buddha either at home or at a temple. This is typically performed at the end of the merit making ceremony.
House cleaning: The biggest cleaning day of the year, Songkran is when Thai people clean, sweep, and mop to get rid of bad items from their houses. The cleaning symbolizes ridding the home of any terrible things that have occurred during the previous year in readiness for better things for the year ahead.
Songkran  ,  Songkran in Thailand ,  Traditional Thai New Year festival , Songkran Festival , History of Songkran Festival , Thai New Year ,  Thailand , เทศกาลสงกรานต์ , The history of Songkran , วันสงกรานต์  , The history of Songkran in Thailand  , The Story of Songkran  ,  Songkran History
#Songkran2557  #Songkran  #SongkranFestival   #ThaiNewYear  #SongkranThailand #กำเนิดวันสงกรานต์  #ตำนานสงกรานต์   #สงกรานต์   #Thailand'sWaterFestival    #Songkran2024    #CelebratingSongkran  #TheWaterFestival
CR   ::    https://www.nationthailand.com/  ,  https://www.huahintoday.com/
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brookston · 8 months ago
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Holidays 4.14
Holidays
Air Force Reserve Day
American Dictionary Day
Americas Day (Honduras, Mexico)
Anfal Genocide Memorial Day
Black Day (South Korea)
Blessing of the Salmon Nets (Northumbria)
Bon Jovi Day (New Jersey)
Cake and Cunnilingus Day
Children’s Day (Peru)
Children with Alopecia Day
Commemoration of Anfal Genocide Against the Kurds (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Cuckoo Day (Old England)
Day of Mologa (Russia)
Day of (No) Silence (GLSEN)
Day of the Georgian Language
Day of the Skater
Dhivehi Language Day (Maldives)
Dictionary Day
Donate Life Blue & Green Day
Draw MegaMan Day
Dreams of Reason Feast Day
Ex-Spouse's Day
414 Day
Global Roller Day
Grand National Ladies Day (UK)
Gujarat (Fire Service Day; India)
International Goalkeeper Day
International Moment of Laughter Day
International Silambam Day
Kids’ Yoga Day
Kinetoscope Day
Look Up at the Sky Day
Lundkommardagen (Puffin Arrival Day; Norway) 
Meme Appreciation Day
Milwaukee Day (414)
Moirang Day (a.k.a. Victory Day; India)
National Bracelet Day
National Dolphin Day
National Donate a Book Day
National Gardening Day
National Kick Balls Day
National Love Our Children Day
National Not Ashamed of Jesus Day
National Perfume Day
National Reach as High as You Can Day
N'Ko Alphabet Day (Mande)
Orange Day (Japan)
Pan American Day
Pathologists’ Assistant Day
Peregrine Falcon Appreciation Day
Peter Capaldi Day
Pigeon Day (French Republic)
Reach As High As You Can Day
Samjinnal (Arrival of Spring; Korea)
Secret Service Day
Spring Hula Hooping Day
Tempting Fate Day
Takayama Spring Festival (Japan)
Thingyan begins (Water Festival; Burma)
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela Day of Service (South Africa)
World Chagas Day
World Quantum Day
Youth Day (Angola)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Espresso Italiano Day (Italy)
International Laverbread Day
Laverbread Day
National Grits Day
National Pecan Day
Oreo Cookie Cheesecake Day
Saison Day
Tannat Day (Uruguay)
2nd Sunday in April
Air Defense Forces Day (Belarus, Russia) [2nd Sunda
Global Day to End Sexual Abuse [2nd Sunday]
Weekly Holidays beginning April 14 (3rd Week)
Animal Control Appreciation Week [2nd Full Week in April]
Animal Cruelty/Human Violence Awareness Week Week [3rd Week in April]
Astronomy Week — Spring [thru 4.20]
Cleaning For A Reason Week [begins 2nd Sunday]
National Coin Week [3rd Week in April]
National Dog Bite Prevention Week [3rd Week in April]
National Public Safety Telecommunications Week [2nd Full Week in April]
National Student Employment Week [2nd Full Week in April]
National Volunteer Week Week [3rd Week in April]
Neurodiagnostic Week [3rd Week in April]
Organize Your Files Week Week [3rd Week in April]
Pan American Week [Week of 4.14]
Independence & Related Days
Jonja Island (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Lawfords (a.k.a. Kingdom of Lawfords; Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
New Year’s Days
Hindi New Year (a.k.a. …
Assamese New Year
Baisakhi (Parts of India)
Bisket Jatra (Nepali New Year)
Bohag Bihu (Assam Valley)
Cambodian New Year
Chetti Chand (Parts of India)
Guḍhī Pāḍavā [1st Day of Chaitra]
Hari Raya Yep Tahun Baru (Indonesia)
Malayali New Year (Kerala)
Nyepi Day (a.k.a. Day of Silence; Bali)
Ougadi (Mauritius)
Pi Mai (Laotian New Year)
Ramayana begins
Sajibu Nongmapanba (Cheiraoba, Manipur, India)
Telgu New Year
Thingyan begins (Burma)
Ugadi (Parts of India)
Vaisakhi (Parts of India)
Kerala New Yea (India)
New Year's Day (Assamese, Bengali, Burmese, Sikh, Khmer, Lao, Nepali, Oriya, Sinhalese, Tamil, Thai, Tuluva; Southeast Asia) [Sidereal Vernal Equinox]
Sidereal New Year (South and Southeast Asian) (a.k.a. …
Aluth Avurudda (Sri Lanka)
Biju Festival (Parts of India)
Bisu (Tulu Nadu region of Karnataka and Kerala, India)
Bizhu (Chakmas in Mizoram, Tripura and Bangladesh)
Bohag Bihu (Assam, India)
Buisu (Tripura, India)
Bwisagu (Bodoland region of Assam, India)
Cheiraoba (Parts of India)
Choul Chnam Thmey (Cambodia)
Jur Sital (Mithila region of Bihar, India and Nepal)
Khmer New Year (Cambodia)
Maha Vusubha Sankranti (Parts of India)
Oriya New Year (Parts of India)
Pahela Baishakh (Bangladesh and West Bengal, India)
Pana Sankranti (Odisha, India)
Pi Mai (Laos)
Puthandu (Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, India and Northern and Eastern regions of Sri Lanka)
Rongali Bihu (Parts of India)
Samjinnal (Korea)
Sangken (Khamti, Singpho, Khamyang, Tangsa in Arunachal Pradesh and Tai Phake, Tai Aiton, and Turung in Assam, India)
Sinhala (Sri Lanka)
Songkran (Thailand)
Tamil New Year (Parts of India)
Thingyan (Myanmar)
Tuluva New Year (Parts of India)
Vaisakhi (Punjab, North and Central India, Nepalese New Year in Nepal)
Varusha Pirruppa (Tamil New Year; Mauritius)
Vishu (Kerala, India)
Water-Sprinkling Festival (Yunnan, China)
Festivals Beginning April 14, 2024
Alphretta Wine Festival (Alpharetta, Georgia)
The Chocolate Expo (Long Island, New York)
International Rose & Wine Festival (Shreveport, Louisiana)
New Haven Restaurant Week (New Haven, Connecticut) [thru 4.19]
Ocean City Restaurant Week (Ocean City, Maryland) [thru 4.19]
Seville Fair (Seville, Spain) [thru 4.20]
Vinitaly (Verona, Italy) [thru 4.17]
ZagreDox (Zagreb, Croatia) [thru 4.21]
Zilker Kite Festival (Austin, Texas)
Feast Days
Abushibarei (Ryukyuan)
Adolph Hitler Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Albategnius (Positivist; Saint)
Ambedkar Jayanti (India)
Ardalion (Christian; Martyrs)
Bénézet (Christian; Saint)
Bernard of iron (Christian; Saint)
Caradoc, Benezet, John, Antony and Eustace (Christian; Martyrs)
Carpus of Thyatira (Christian; Saint)
Domnina of Terni (Christian; Saint)
Elfin Choirs Congress (Shamanism)
The Extremes (Muppetism)
Gabriel Jacques de Saint-Aubin (Artology)
Galungan (Celebrating Victory of Dharma over Adharma; Bali)
Henry Beard Delany (Episcopal Church (USA))
Justin (Christian; Martyr)
Lambert of Lyons (Christian; Saint)
Lidwina (a.k.a. B. Lidwina of Schiedam or Lydwina; Christian; Saint)
Look Up at the Sky Day (Pastafarian)
Marianne’s Day (Pagan)
Maryamma (Goddess of the Sea; Hinduism; Everyday Wicca)
Peter González (Christian; Saint)
Sommarsblot (Norse)
Three Smiles Day (Celtic Book of Days)
Tiburtius, Valerian, and Maximus (Christian; Martyrs)
Victor Borisov-Musatov (Artology)
Islamic Moveable Calendar Holidays
Eid al-Fitr celebrations continue (Islam)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Historically Bad Day (Lincoln shot, Titanic hit an iceberg & 9 other tragedies) [1 of 11]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 17 of 60)
Premieres
About Damn Time, by Lizzo (Song; 2022)
American Psycho (Film; 2000)
Batman vs. Robin (WB Animated Film; 2015)
Beach Blanket Bingo (Film; 1965)
Beauty and the Beast (WB MM Cartoon; 1934)
The Big Bad Wolf (Disney Silly Symphonies Cartoon; 1934)
British Steel, by Judas Priest (Album; 1980)
Buddy’s Garage (WB LT Cartoon; 1934)
Bye Bye Birdie (Broadway Musical; 1960)
The Candle in the Wind, by T.H. White (Novel; 1958) [Once and Future King #4]
Cannery Roden (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1967)
Diver Down, by Van Halen (Album; 1982)
Execution Dock, by Anne Perry (Novel; 2009)
The Fair-Haired Hare (WB LT Cartoon; 1951)
Farewell Waltz, by Milan Kundera (Novel; 1972)
The Fate of the Furious [F&F #8]
Girl Happy (Film; 1965)
Grape Nutty (Color Rhapsody Cartoon; 1949)
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (Novel; 1939)
The Hash Shop (Oswald he Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1930)
The History of Sexuality, by Michel Foucault (Philosophy Book; 1976)
Iceland's Bell, by Halldór Laxness (Novel; 1943)
Insulin’ the Sultan (Ub Iwerks Cartoon; 1934)
The Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison (Novel; 1952)
Iron Maiden, by Iron Maiden (Album; 1980)
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, by Public Enemy (Album; 1988)
Keeping the Faith (Film; 2000)
The King of Torts, by John Grisham (Novel; 2003)
Kinky Boots (Film; 2006)
The Legend of Korea (Animated TV Series; 2012)
Let’s Dance, by David Bowie (Album; 1983)
The Missing Piece Shel Silverstein (Children’s Book; 1976)
Mixed Master (WB LT Cartoon; 1956)
Much Ado About Mousing (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1964)
The Notorious Bettie Page (Film; 2006)
Off the Deep End, by Weird Al Yankovic (Album; 1992)
The Pebble and the Penguin (Animated Film; 1995)
Put Me in the Zoo, by Robert Lopshire (Children’s Book; 1960)
Put-Put, Pink (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1968)
Renfield (Film; 2023)
Ripley’s Believe It or Not! (Radio Series; 1930)
Rocket Man, by Elton John (Song; 1972)
Say Anything (Film; 1989)
Shift: First Shift — Legacy, by Hugh Howey (Novel; 2012)
Spark (Animated Film; 2017)
Thank You For Smoking (Film; 2006)
Ultra, by Depeche Mode (Album; 1997)
Webster’s American Dictionary (Book; 1818)
The Wild (Animated Film; 2006)
Today’s Name Days
Elmo, Erna, Ernestine (Austria)
Maksim, Valerijan, Zdravko (Croatia)
Vincenc (Czech Republic)
Tiburtius (Denmark)
Lehe, Lehte, Lehti (Estonia)
Taito (Finland)
Ludivine, Maxime (France)
Elmo, Erna, Ernestine (Germany)
Aristarhos, Thomais (Greece)
Tibor (Hungary)
Abbondio, Ignazio, Lamberto (Italy)
Agape, Gudrite, Strauja (Latvia)
Justinas, Vaišvydė, Vaiva, Valerijonas, Visvaldas (Lithuania)
Ellinor, Nora (Norway)
Berenike, Julianna, Justyn, Maria, Myślimir, Tyburcjusz, Walerian, Waleriana (Poland)
Pahomie (Romania)
Maria (Russia)
Justína (Slovakia)
Lidia, Tiburcio, Valeriano (Spain)
Tiburtius (Sweden)
Martin (Ukraine)
Caradoc, Carey, Cary, Hudson (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 105 of 2024; 261 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 7 of week 15 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Saille (Willow) [Day 1 of 28]
Chinese: Month 3 (Wu-Chen), Day 6 (Wu-Shen)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 6 Nisan 5784
Islamic: 5 Shawwal 1445
J Cal: 15 Cyan; Oneday [15 of 30]
Julian: 1 April 2024
Moon: 38%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 21 Archimedes (4th Month) [Hippachus]
Runic Half Month: Man (Human Being) [Day 5 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 27 of 92)
Week: 3rd Week of April
Zodiac: Aries (Day 25 of 31)
Calendar Changes
April (a.k.a. Aprilis; Julian Calendar) [Month 4 of 12]
Saille (Willow) [Celtic Tree Calendar; Month 4 of 13]
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brookstonalmanac · 8 months ago
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Holidays 4.14
Holidays
Air Force Reserve Day
American Dictionary Day
Americas Day (Honduras, Mexico)
Anfal Genocide Memorial Day
Black Day (South Korea)
Blessing of the Salmon Nets (Northumbria)
Bon Jovi Day (New Jersey)
Cake and Cunnilingus Day
Children’s Day (Peru)
Children with Alopecia Day
Commemoration of Anfal Genocide Against the Kurds (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Cuckoo Day (Old England)
Day of Mologa (Russia)
Day of (No) Silence (GLSEN)
Day of the Georgian Language
Day of the Skater
Dhivehi Language Day (Maldives)
Dictionary Day
Donate Life Blue & Green Day
Draw MegaMan Day
Dreams of Reason Feast Day
Ex-Spouse's Day
414 Day
Global Roller Day
Grand National Ladies Day (UK)
Gujarat (Fire Service Day; India)
International Goalkeeper Day
International Moment of Laughter Day
International Silambam Day
Kids’ Yoga Day
Kinetoscope Day
Look Up at the Sky Day
Lundkommardagen (Puffin Arrival Day; Norway) 
Meme Appreciation Day
Milwaukee Day (414)
Moirang Day (a.k.a. Victory Day; India)
National Bracelet Day
National Dolphin Day
National Donate a Book Day
National Gardening Day
National Kick Balls Day
National Love Our Children Day
National Not Ashamed of Jesus Day
National Perfume Day
National Reach as High as You Can Day
N'Ko Alphabet Day (Mande)
Orange Day (Japan)
Pan American Day
Pathologists’ Assistant Day
Peregrine Falcon Appreciation Day
Peter Capaldi Day
Pigeon Day (French Republic)
Reach As High As You Can Day
Samjinnal (Arrival of Spring; Korea)
Secret Service Day
Spring Hula Hooping Day
Tempting Fate Day
Takayama Spring Festival (Japan)
Thingyan begins (Water Festival; Burma)
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela Day of Service (South Africa)
World Chagas Day
World Quantum Day
Youth Day (Angola)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Espresso Italiano Day (Italy)
International Laverbread Day
Laverbread Day
National Grits Day
National Pecan Day
Oreo Cookie Cheesecake Day
Saison Day
Tannat Day (Uruguay)
2nd Sunday in April
Air Defense Forces Day (Belarus, Russia) [2nd Sunda
Global Day to End Sexual Abuse [2nd Sunday]
Weekly Holidays beginning April 14 (3rd Week)
Animal Control Appreciation Week [2nd Full Week in April]
Animal Cruelty/Human Violence Awareness Week Week [3rd Week in April]
Astronomy Week — Spring [thru 4.20]
Cleaning For A Reason Week [begins 2nd Sunday]
National Coin Week [3rd Week in April]
National Dog Bite Prevention Week [3rd Week in April]
National Public Safety Telecommunications Week [2nd Full Week in April]
National Student Employment Week [2nd Full Week in April]
National Volunteer Week Week [3rd Week in April]
Neurodiagnostic Week [3rd Week in April]
Organize Your Files Week Week [3rd Week in April]
Pan American Week [Week of 4.14]
Independence & Related Days
Jonja Island (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Lawfords (a.k.a. Kingdom of Lawfords; Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
New Year’s Days
Hindi New Year (a.k.a. …
Assamese New Year
Baisakhi (Parts of India)
Bisket Jatra (Nepali New Year)
Bohag Bihu (Assam Valley)
Cambodian New Year
Chetti Chand (Parts of India)
Guḍhī Pāḍavā [1st Day of Chaitra]
Hari Raya Yep Tahun Baru (Indonesia)
Malayali New Year (Kerala)
Nyepi Day (a.k.a. Day of Silence; Bali)
Ougadi (Mauritius)
Pi Mai (Laotian New Year)
Ramayana begins
Sajibu Nongmapanba (Cheiraoba, Manipur, India)
Telgu New Year
Thingyan begins (Burma)
Ugadi (Parts of India)
Vaisakhi (Parts of India)
Kerala New Yea (India)
New Year's Day (Assamese, Bengali, Burmese, Sikh, Khmer, Lao, Nepali, Oriya, Sinhalese, Tamil, Thai, Tuluva; Southeast Asia) [Sidereal Vernal Equinox]
Sidereal New Year (South and Southeast Asian) (a.k.a. …
Aluth Avurudda (Sri Lanka)
Biju Festival (Parts of India)
Bisu (Tulu Nadu region of Karnataka and Kerala, India)
Bizhu (Chakmas in Mizoram, Tripura and Bangladesh)
Bohag Bihu (Assam, India)
Buisu (Tripura, India)
Bwisagu (Bodoland region of Assam, India)
Cheiraoba (Parts of India)
Choul Chnam Thmey (Cambodia)
Jur Sital (Mithila region of Bihar, India and Nepal)
Khmer New Year (Cambodia)
Maha Vusubha Sankranti (Parts of India)
Oriya New Year (Parts of India)
Pahela Baishakh (Bangladesh and West Bengal, India)
Pana Sankranti (Odisha, India)
Pi Mai (Laos)
Puthandu (Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, India and Northern and Eastern regions of Sri Lanka)
Rongali Bihu (Parts of India)
Samjinnal (Korea)
Sangken (Khamti, Singpho, Khamyang, Tangsa in Arunachal Pradesh and Tai Phake, Tai Aiton, and Turung in Assam, India)
Sinhala (Sri Lanka)
Songkran (Thailand)
Tamil New Year (Parts of India)
Thingyan (Myanmar)
Tuluva New Year (Parts of India)
Vaisakhi (Punjab, North and Central India, Nepalese New Year in Nepal)
Varusha Pirruppa (Tamil New Year; Mauritius)
Vishu (Kerala, India)
Water-Sprinkling Festival (Yunnan, China)
Festivals Beginning April 14, 2024
Alphretta Wine Festival (Alpharetta, Georgia)
The Chocolate Expo (Long Island, New York)
International Rose & Wine Festival (Shreveport, Louisiana)
New Haven Restaurant Week (New Haven, Connecticut) [thru 4.19]
Ocean City Restaurant Week (Ocean City, Maryland) [thru 4.19]
Seville Fair (Seville, Spain) [thru 4.20]
Vinitaly (Verona, Italy) [thru 4.17]
ZagreDox (Zagreb, Croatia) [thru 4.21]
Zilker Kite Festival (Austin, Texas)
Feast Days
Abushibarei (Ryukyuan)
Adolph Hitler Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Albategnius (Positivist; Saint)
Ambedkar Jayanti (India)
Ardalion (Christian; Martyrs)
Bénézet (Christian; Saint)
Bernard of iron (Christian; Saint)
Caradoc, Benezet, John, Antony and Eustace (Christian; Martyrs)
Carpus of Thyatira (Christian; Saint)
Domnina of Terni (Christian; Saint)
Elfin Choirs Congress (Shamanism)
The Extremes (Muppetism)
Gabriel Jacques de Saint-Aubin (Artology)
Galungan (Celebrating Victory of Dharma over Adharma; Bali)
Henry Beard Delany (Episcopal Church (USA))
Justin (Christian; Martyr)
Lambert of Lyons (Christian; Saint)
Lidwina (a.k.a. B. Lidwina of Schiedam or Lydwina; Christian; Saint)
Look Up at the Sky Day (Pastafarian)
Marianne’s Day (Pagan)
Maryamma (Goddess of the Sea; Hinduism; Everyday Wicca)
Peter González (Christian; Saint)
Sommarsblot (Norse)
Three Smiles Day (Celtic Book of Days)
Tiburtius, Valerian, and Maximus (Christian; Martyrs)
Victor Borisov-Musatov (Artology)
Islamic Moveable Calendar Holidays
Eid al-Fitr celebrations continue (Islam)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Historically Bad Day (Lincoln shot, Titanic hit an iceberg & 9 other tragedies) [1 of 11]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 17 of 60)
Premieres
About Damn Time, by Lizzo (Song; 2022)
American Psycho (Film; 2000)
Batman vs. Robin (WB Animated Film; 2015)
Beach Blanket Bingo (Film; 1965)
Beauty and the Beast (WB MM Cartoon; 1934)
The Big Bad Wolf (Disney Silly Symphonies Cartoon; 1934)
British Steel, by Judas Priest (Album; 1980)
Buddy’s Garage (WB LT Cartoon; 1934)
Bye Bye Birdie (Broadway Musical; 1960)
The Candle in the Wind, by T.H. White (Novel; 1958) [Once and Future King #4]
Cannery Roden (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1967)
Diver Down, by Van Halen (Album; 1982)
Execution Dock, by Anne Perry (Novel; 2009)
The Fair-Haired Hare (WB LT Cartoon; 1951)
Farewell Waltz, by Milan Kundera (Novel; 1972)
The Fate of the Furious [F&F #8]
Girl Happy (Film; 1965)
Grape Nutty (Color Rhapsody Cartoon; 1949)
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (Novel; 1939)
The Hash Shop (Oswald he Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1930)
The History of Sexuality, by Michel Foucault (Philosophy Book; 1976)
Iceland's Bell, by Halldór Laxness (Novel; 1943)
Insulin’ the Sultan (Ub Iwerks Cartoon; 1934)
The Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison (Novel; 1952)
Iron Maiden, by Iron Maiden (Album; 1980)
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, by Public Enemy (Album; 1988)
Keeping the Faith (Film; 2000)
The King of Torts, by John Grisham (Novel; 2003)
Kinky Boots (Film; 2006)
The Legend of Korea (Animated TV Series; 2012)
Let’s Dance, by David Bowie (Album; 1983)
The Missing Piece Shel Silverstein (Children’s Book; 1976)
Mixed Master (WB LT Cartoon; 1956)
Much Ado About Mousing (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1964)
The Notorious Bettie Page (Film; 2006)
Off the Deep End, by Weird Al Yankovic (Album; 1992)
The Pebble and the Penguin (Animated Film; 1995)
Put Me in the Zoo, by Robert Lopshire (Children’s Book; 1960)
Put-Put, Pink (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1968)
Renfield (Film; 2023)
Ripley’s Believe It or Not! (Radio Series; 1930)
Rocket Man, by Elton John (Song; 1972)
Say Anything (Film; 1989)
Shift: First Shift — Legacy, by Hugh Howey (Novel; 2012)
Spark (Animated Film; 2017)
Thank You For Smoking (Film; 2006)
Ultra, by Depeche Mode (Album; 1997)
Webster’s American Dictionary (Book; 1818)
The Wild (Animated Film; 2006)
Today’s Name Days
Elmo, Erna, Ernestine (Austria)
Maksim, Valerijan, Zdravko (Croatia)
Vincenc (Czech Republic)
Tiburtius (Denmark)
Lehe, Lehte, Lehti (Estonia)
Taito (Finland)
Ludivine, Maxime (France)
Elmo, Erna, Ernestine (Germany)
Aristarhos, Thomais (Greece)
Tibor (Hungary)
Abbondio, Ignazio, Lamberto (Italy)
Agape, Gudrite, Strauja (Latvia)
Justinas, Vaišvydė, Vaiva, Valerijonas, Visvaldas (Lithuania)
Ellinor, Nora (Norway)
Berenike, Julianna, Justyn, Maria, Myślimir, Tyburcjusz, Walerian, Waleriana (Poland)
Pahomie (Romania)
Maria (Russia)
Justína (Slovakia)
Lidia, Tiburcio, Valeriano (Spain)
Tiburtius (Sweden)
Martin (Ukraine)
Caradoc, Carey, Cary, Hudson (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 105 of 2024; 261 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 7 of week 15 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Saille (Willow) [Day 1 of 28]
Chinese: Month 3 (Wu-Chen), Day 6 (Wu-Shen)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 6 Nisan 5784
Islamic: 5 Shawwal 1445
J Cal: 15 Cyan; Oneday [15 of 30]
Julian: 1 April 2024
Moon: 38%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 21 Archimedes (4th Month) [Hippachus]
Runic Half Month: Man (Human Being) [Day 5 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 27 of 92)
Week: 3rd Week of April
Zodiac: Aries (Day 25 of 31)
Calendar Changes
April (a.k.a. Aprilis; Julian Calendar) [Month 4 of 12]
Saille (Willow) [Celtic Tree Calendar; Month 4 of 13]
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wikiuntamed · 10 months ago
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On this day in Wikipedia: Tuesday, 13th February
Welcome, vítejte, mirë se vjen, добродошли (dobrodošli) 🤗 What does @Wikipedia say about 13th February through the years 🏛️📜🗓️?
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13th February 2021 🗓️ : Event - Donald Trump Former U.S. President Donald Trump is acquitted in his second impeachment trial. "Donald John Trump (born June 14, 1946) is an American politician, media personality, and businessman who served as the 45th president of the United States from 2017 to 2021. Trump received a Bachelor of Science in economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1968, and his father named him..."
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Image by Shaleah Craighead
13th February 2019 🗓️ : Death - Callistus Ndlovu Callistus Ndlovu, Zimbabwean academic and politician (b. 1936) "Callistus Dingiswayo Ndlovu (9 February 1936 – 13 February 2019) was a Zimbabwean academic, diplomat, and politician. He joined the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) in 1963 as a teacher in Matabeleland, and went on to serve as its representative to the United Nations and North America in the..."
13th February 2014 🗓️ : Death - Balu Mahendra Balu Mahendra, Sri Lankan-Indian director, cinematographer, and screenwriter (b. 1939) "Balanathan Benjamin Mahendran (19 May 1939 – 13 February 2014), commonly known as Balu Mahendra, was a cinematographer, director, screenwriter and film editor who worked in various Indian film industries, primarily in Tamil and Malayalam cinema. Born in Sri Lanka, Mahendran developed a passion for..."
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Image licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0? by Jaffar Theekkathir
13th February 1974 🗓️ : Birth - Fonzworth Bentley Fonzworth Bentley, American rapper and actor "Derek Watkins (born February 13, 1974), known professionally as Fonzworth Bentley, is an American rapper, actor, television presenter, and author. He is perhaps best known for being Sean Combs' former personal valet and assistant, as first seen in Making the Band 2, and was the host of MTV's From..."
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Image licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0? by Angela George at https://www.flickr.com/photos/sharongraphics/
13th February 1924 🗓️ : Birth - Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber, French journalist and politician (d. 2006) "Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber, often referred to as JJSS (13 February 1924 – 7 November 2006), was a French journalist and politician. He co-founded L'Express in 1953 with Françoise Giroud, and then went on to become president of the Radical Party in 1971. He oversaw its transition to the..."
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Image licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0? by Nuvolari72
13th February 1818 🗓️ : Death - George Rogers Clark George Rogers Clark, American general (b. 1752) "George Rogers Clark (November 19, 1752 – February 13, 1818) was an American military officer and surveyor from Virginia who became the highest-ranking Patriot military officer on the northwestern frontier during the Revolutionary War. He served as leader of the Virginia militia in Kentucky (then..."
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Image by James B. Longacre
13th February 🗓️ : Holiday - Christian feast day: Fulcran "Saint Fulcran (died 13 February 1006) was a French saint. He was bishop of Lodève. ..."
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Image by François Matet
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supererwin89 · 6 years ago
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hellomellowgiverstudent · 6 years ago
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monahan32-blog · 6 years ago
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14 Days in Sri Lanka would be a great to enjoy a holiday. Sri Lanka has lots of things to see and visit in 2 weeks. If you are looking for 2 Weeks itinerary for Sri Lanka, connect with TripLankaTours.com to arrange your 2 weeks tour to Sri Lanka.
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griffith228 · 6 years ago
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myths-n-legends · 2 years ago
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Deepavail (Diwail)
Hehe, hello I almost forgot to post today again, anyway its Diwail/Deepavail, so happy diwali to all the people how celebrate the festival!! Also only one week till Halloween!! Look who once said that she'll never write anything about Indian mythology (°=°;;) Anyways enjoy the story.
Deepavali (Btw its actully Deepavali but many people call and know it as Diwail), also known as the Festival of Lights is a Hindu religious festival and one of the most important festivals within Hinduism.
It generally lasts five days (or six in some regions of India), and is celebrated during the Hindu lunisolar month Kartika (between mid-October and mid-November). It is one of the most popular festivals of Hinduism, it symbolizes the spiritual "victory of light over darkness, good over evil, and knowledge over ignorance". 
The festival is widely associated with Lakshmi, goddess of prosperity and Ganesha, god of wisdom and the remover of obstacles, with many other regional traditions connecting the holiday to Sita  and Rama, Vishnu, Krishna, Durga, Shiva,  Kali, Hanuman, Kubera, Yama, Yami, Dhanvantari, or Vishvakarman.
Furthermore, it is a celebration of the day Rama returned to his kingdom in  Ayodhya with his wife Sita and his brother Lakshmana after defeating the demon Ravana in Lanka and serving 14 years of exile.
In the lead-up to Deepavali, celebrants prepare by cleaning, renovating, and decorating their homes and workplaces with diyas (oil lamps) and rangolis (colorful artistic circle patterns).
During Diwali, people wear their finest clothes, illuminate the interior and exterior of their homes with diyas and rangoli, perform worship ceremonies of Lakshmi, the goddess of prosperity and wealth, light fireworks, and partake in family feasts, where mithai (sweets) and gifts are shared.
Originally a Hindu festival, Diwali has transcended religious lines and is also celebrated by Jains and Sikhs. It is a major cultural event for the Hindu, Sikh, and Jain diaspora.
The five-day long festival originated in the Indian subcontinent and is mentioned in early Sanskrit texts. Diwali is usually celebrated twenty days after the Vijayadashami (Dussehra,  Dasara,  Dashain,  Dashahara.(There are all the same btw)) festival, with Dhanteras, or the regional equivalent, marking the first day of the festival when celebrants prepare by cleaning their homes and making decorations on the floor, such as rangolis.
Some regions of Indiastart Diwali festivities the day before Dhanteras with Govatsa Dwadashi. The second day is Naraka Chaturdashi. The third day is the day of Lakshmi Puja and the darkest night of the traditional month. In some parts of India, the day after Lakshmi Puja is marked with the Govardhan Puja  and Balipratipada (Padwa).
Some Hinducommunities mark the last day as Bhai Doojor the regional equivalent, which is dedicated to the bond between sister and brother, while other Hindu and Sikh craftsmen communities mark this day as Vishwakarma Puja and observe it by performing maintenance in their work spaces and offering prayers.
Some other faiths in India��also celebrate their respective festivals alongside Diwali. The Jains observe their own Diwali which marks the final liberation of Mahavira,  the Sikhscelebrate Bandi Chhor Divas to mark the release of Guru Hargobind from a Mughalprison, while Newar Buddhists, unlike other Buddhists, celebrate Diwali by worshipping Lakshmi, while the Hindus of Eastern Indiaand Bangladesh generally celebrate Diwali by worshipping the goddess Kali. 
The main day of the festival of Diwali (the day of Lakshmi Puja) is an official holiday in Fiji, Guyana, India,  Malaysia, Mauritius, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago.
A/n: stolen knowledge from Wikipedia coz your girl lost track of time. Im sorry about that and also for no pictures and also became I'm late at posting again. If there are any spelling errors I have no Idea about it but I apology for that too.
See you on the next post and happy Diwail!! Bye and take care.
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feelingofcontent · 3 years ago
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DNP Rewatch: Another Sleepless Night with Phil
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Date video was published: 02/16/2016 (X)
DNP Main Channel Rewatch: 299
Phil had done his first “sleepless night” video almost a year before this, so an appropriate title for “another” one!
0:00 - I love the immediate crazy-hair
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0:08 - he does look very tired in this video
0:18 - that is a really long nap at a bad time of the day for a normal sleep schedule. Also, did he nap in his contacts?
0:30 - he turns into a burrito when he sleeps
0:34 - the Star Wars pajamas he got for Christmas 2015 that he was wearing in Reacting to my Baby Videos! too
0:38 - this does not look like a particularly comfortable filming position
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0:39 - whenever there’s a glimpse of that other nightstand when he films, it’s always completely empty, or crammed with whatever cups and things it looks like he moved from the other side
0:40 - space coat! and blob fish plushie, Buffy box set, family photo (that’s in the forever home bedroom), TABINOF and more on that bookshelf
0:46 - oh, I forgot we get a closer look, lol. TATINOF photo booth photos with Dan in the McQueen shirt! and the Miyazaki box set Dan got him for his birthday.
0:53 - lots of Stephen King books there. and Tokaido that they got in Festive DITL
1:07 - Mothra guarding the door apparently. Dan was on holiday with his family in Sri Lanka. (1, 2, 3).
1:15 - that seems dangerous, lol. I love the look at this way in the kitchen that we don’t often see, with the drying rack and piles of stuff on the cabinets and some sort of photo booth photo it looks like taped to the toaster. It’s just so normal. Sometimes I think that “normal” look at their lives is part of why DNP seem so relatable and gained and kept an audience . They mop their own floors and clean their own toilets. 
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1:24 - crumpets are not dinner, Phil. But maybe appropriate for a 3am snack
1:44 - it shouldn’t be any more heavy than the kettle there...alrighty
1:55 - I love him just staring at it waiting for something to happen with the interspersed title cards 😂
2:12 - that...does not look appetizing
2:25 - flipped around to see the other side of the kitchen now
2:35 - think this clip was edited in out of order since it’s back to the other angle
2:44 - that seems like such a perfect lucky toss...until the end of this video. Movie magic.
2:56 - had to zoom in on the tongue-thing, apparently. Also, I really don’t think crumpets and mac & cheese are comparable foods...
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3:14 - burns mouth and then immediately goes for a second sip. Phil.
3:18 - I do think it’s probably not super common for YouTubers to watch their own videos?
3:23 - this part kills me. 😭 Dan is away and Phil is “nostalgic” and look at the smile on Dan’s face in the Sims video where Phil’s paused it. help.
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3:44 - I don’t think we had even seen that bedside table yet. I don’t know how people sleep in ear plugs; I just can’t do it because I’m so afraid I will miss an alarm or something important
3:59 - yikes, that was a long nap with contacts in
4:07 - now it appears he’s using a towel to hold the camera up, lol
4:11 - that was almost a cool move but then... not surprising.
4:33 - ouch.
4:35 - DNP cacti plushies? they have SO MANY DNP objects all over their house
4:42 - awww, tired Phil
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4:53 - Phil is getting too excited about this to get sleepy. Also, I don’t think staring at a computer screen is probably very helpful
5:20 - this one is just creepy
5:51 - “I didn’t enjoy that at all” 😂
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6:01 - 6:40am does not seem like a good time to be going to bed for the “night”
6:24 - so many crumpet takes hahaha
I do love this video. It has always seemed to most “realistic” of the sleepless night videos, because Dan was away. Though Phil must have filmed it the first night Dan was gone because just a day later Phil went up to see his family and posted this video while he was still there (1, 2, 3, 4, 5).
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khushigodara · 2 years ago
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NOTE ON DIWALI
Diwali (also: Deepawali) is one of India's biggest festivals. The word 'Deepawali' means rows of lighted lamps. It is a Festival of Lights and Hindus celebrate it with joy. During this festival, people light up their houses and shopswith Diyas (small cup-shaped oil lamp made of baked clay). They worship the Lord Ganeshafor welfare and prosperity and Goddess Lakshmi for wealth and wisdom.
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This festival is celebrated in the Hindu monthof Kartikamasam which falls sometime during October or November. It is celebrated to mark the return of Lord Rama after 14 years of exileand his victory over the Demon Ravana. In many parts of India, Deepawali is celebrated for five consecutive days. Hindus regard it as a celebration of life and use the occasion to strengthen relationships. In some parts of India, it marks the beginning of a new year. People clean and decorate their house before the festival. They do colorful rangoli art works on floors.
Deepawali is celebrated and is a public holiday in countries such as Nepal, Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, Mauritius, Fiji, Suriname, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago. It is also a school holiday in many states of the United States with a large Hindu population. President George W. Bush had the first celebration of the holiday in the White House.
Hindus light up their homes and shops to welcome the Goddess Lakshmi and to give them good luck for the year ahead. A few days before Ravtegh, which is the day before Deepavali, houses, buildings, shops and temples are thoroughly cleaned, whitewashedand decorated with pictures, toys and flowers. On the day of Deepawali, people put on their best clothes and exchange greetings, gifts and sweets with their friends and family.
At night, buildings are illuminated with earthen lamps, candle-sticks and electric bulbs. Sweets and toy shop are decorated to attract the passers-by. The bazaars and streets are overcrowded. People buy sweets for their own families and also send them as presents to their friends and relatives. The Goddess Lakshmi is also worshiped in the form of earthen images, silver rupee. Hindus believe that on this day, Lakshmi only enters houses which are neat and tidy. People offer prayers for their own health, wealth and prosperity. They leave the light on in buildings believing that Lakshmi will not have difficulty in finding her way in.
Diwali is one of the most important festival of the Hindus.It is also known as deepawali or the festival of lights. It comes on Amavasya day in the month of kartik. Both rich and poor wear new clothes on this day. Lots of sweets are made. People light diyas and burn crackers. They ex- change greetings and sweets. Goddess Laxmi is worshipped on this day.
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sadmmann · 6 years ago
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Victims of the attack in Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan authorities have confirmed that 253 people were killed in a wave of suicide bombings on the island on Easter Sunday. This list does not include all the victims 
Shantha Mayadunne and Nisanga Mayadunne
The Sri Lankan TV chef Shantha Mayadunne and her daughter Nisanga were killed in the blast at the Shangri-La hotel in Colombo. Nisanga posted a picture on Facebook shortly before the explosion with the title “Easter breakfast with my family”.
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Anita Nicholson, Alex Nicholson and Annabel Nicholson
Anita Nicholson, a 42-year-old lawyer based in Singapore, her son, Alex, 14, and daughter, Annabel, 11, died when a suicide bomber detonated a device in the breakfast queue at the Shangri-La hotel in Colombo. Ben Nicholson, 43, was the only person in his family to survive the attack.
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Zayan Chowdhury
The eight-year-old, a relative of the Bangladeshi prime minister, was killed while having breakfast with his father at a hotel in Colombo, when a suicide bomber detonated his device.
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Sally Bradley and Bill Harrop
Sally Bradley, a GP, and her husband, Bill Harrop, a retired firefighter, were from Manchester but lived in Perth, Australia. They died in the Cinnamon Grand hotel bombing.
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Amelie Linsey and Daniel Linsey
Amelie, 15, and her brother, Daniel, 19, were killed at the Shangri-La hotel on the final day of their holiday while trying to escape the first blast, according to family members.
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Rui Lucas
The Portuguese citizen, an electrical engineer aged 31, was on his honeymoon with his wife, Sílvia Ramos, when he was killed. He had gone to get some more food from the buffet when the bomber struck, the Portuguese newspaper Correio da manhã reported.
���She told me that it was all very fast. He got up and soon after there was an explosion and the room filled with smoke. After she managed to see Rui. He was in front of her, dead,” a family friend who had spoken with the widow told the paper.
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Kieran Shafritz de Zoysa
A fifth grader at the prestigious Sidwell Friends school in Washington DC, Kieran Shafritz de Zoysa had been on a leave of absence from the school for a year, living in Sri Lanka, the New York Times reported.
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Dieter Kowalski
The 40-year-old Denver resident was killed during a business trip for the publisher Pearson. "And the fun begins," he posted on Facebook. "Love these work trips. 24 hours of flying. See you soon Sri Lanka!
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Monique Allen
Allen, 54, a Dutch citizen, was on holiday in Sri Lanka with her husband and three sons. She had gone down for breakfast with one son, while her husband and two other sons stayed upstairs. While they were eating, the bomber attacked, a Dutch paper reported.
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Rangan Fernando, his wife Danadiri and their children
As a result of the attack on the church of St. Sebastian in Negombo, the whole family died - Rangana Fernando, his wife Danadiri and their three children. The eldest daughter of the couple, Biola (third from right) was six years old, Leone is four years old, and the youngest child, Seth, is only 11 months old.
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Ramesh Raju, hero of Zion church
Raju was at the Easter service at Zion evangelical church in Batticaloa when a stranger carrying a large backpack tried to enter, saying he wanted to film the service. But Raju told the man he could not enter with a large bag and forced him outside the church. Just after he did so, the bomb detonated, the BBC reported.
He leaves behind a wife, Chrishanthini, who was a Sunday school teacher, and two children, all of whom were attending the service with him.
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Sharon and Sarah Santhakumar
Twelve-year-old Sharon and his 11-year-old sister, Sarah, were among a large group of children killed at Zion church. They were clustered near the door after finishing Sunday school class. The siblings were buried next to each other the day after they were killed, the BBC reported.
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Berlington Joseph Gomez, Chandrika Arumugam and three children Bevon, Clavon and Avon
Berlington Joseph Gomez, 33, and his wife, Chandrika Arumugam, 31, and their three sons, Bevon, 9, Clavon, 6, and Avon, 11 months, were all killed in the blast at St Anthony’s shrine in Colombo. “All family, all generation, is lost,” Gomez’s father told Associated Press.
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Manik Suriaaratchi and Alexendria Suriaaratchi
Manik Suriaaratchi and her 10-year-old daughter, Alexendria, were killed in the blast at St Sebastian’s in Negombo. Originally from Melbourne, Australia, they had moved to Sri Lanka five years ago.
Sudesh Kolonne, the husband and father of the two killed, had been standing outside the church when the blast hit. “I heard a huge noise and I jumped into the church and I saw that my wife and my daughter were on the floor,” he told the ABC.
“I just saw my daughter on the floor and I tried to lift her up, [but] she was already dead. And, exactly the same … next my wife is there. That’s the end of the story of my daughter, my wife.”
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Subramani Christopher
Christopher, 28, was a driver and odd jobs man who died in the blast at St Anthony's church in Colombo. He was originally from Akuressa in the south of the country, but was working in Colombo, where he lived in a tiny house near the church for which he paid 10,000 ($57; £44) rupees a month. He had been married only 11 months. He had gone to church with his wife and infant son on Easter. His wife and child survived but he did not.
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Enosh Silva
Enosh , 12, of Sri Lanka, was one of several children killed at St. Sebastian’s church, his father told Agence France-Presse. 
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 Agnes, Alfred and Alma Povlsen
Three children of the billionaire fashion tycoon behind Asos also died. Anders Holch Povlsen, Denmark’s wealthiest man and one of the largest landowners in Scotland, lost three of his four children. A spokesman for his company declined to give further details.
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Many victims were citizens of other countries who came on vacation or on a business trip to Sri Lanka:
BRITAIN:
Sri Lanka's top diplomat in Britain says authorities know of eight British nationals killed in the bombings.
Among them were lawyer Anita Nicholson, son Alex Nicholson and daughter Annabel Nicholson, her husband, Ben Nicholson, confirmed in a statement.
INDIA:
Indian officials say eight Indians died in the attacks.
DENMARK:
The Bestseller clothing chain confirmed Danish media reports that three of the children of its owner, business tycoon Anders Holch Povlsen, were killed in the attacks.
SPAIN:
Spain's Foreign Ministry says a Spanish man and woman were killed but didn't provide further details.
AUSTRALIA:
Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison says two Australian citizens were killed.
CHINA:
Chinese state media say two of the country's citizens died in the blasts.
UNITED STATES:
The State Department says at least four Americans were killed and several others seriously injured. It gave no details about the victims' identities.
SWITZERLAND:
The Foreign Ministry says two Swiss nationals, one of whom also had the citizenship of another country it didn't name, died in the attacks. It said a third member of the family, who had two non-Swiss citizenships, also was killed. It didn't identify the victims.
OTHERS:
The Netherlands, Japan and Portugal have also confirmed their nationals were among the dead.
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I am very sorry that I can not tell you about all the dead people in this terrible and senseless terrorist attack. I am very sorry that this happened. Remember
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brookston · 2 years ago
Text
Holidays 3.2
Holidays
Adwa Day (Ethiopia)
Air Force Day (Sri Lanka)
American Citizenship Day (Puerto Rico)
Baloch Culture Day (Balochistan)
Claudette Colvin Day
Dia de la Ciudadania Americana (Puerto Rico)
Dr. Seuss Day
Everything Acts To Further Day
Give Up Easily Day
Guam History and Chamorro Heritage Day (Guam)
Highway Numbers Day
International Rescue Cat Awareness Day
Jamahiriya Day (Libya)
James Roland Webster Day (Anguilla)
Key Grip Day
Midnight at the Oasis Day (Arizona)
National Blackjack Day
National Salesperson Day
National Usher Syndrome Awareness Day (UK)
National Walter Day
Old Stuff Day
Peasants’ Day (Burma)
Read Across America Day [Weekday closest to 3.2]
She Decides Day
302 Day
The Toddle Waddle
University Mental Health and Wellbeing Day (UK)
Victory at Adwa Day (Ethiopia)
World Teen Mental Wellness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Banana Cream Pie Day
National Egg McMuffin Day
3.2 Beer Day
Welsh Venison Day
1st Thursday in March
National Hospitalist Day [1st Thursday]
National Vending Day [1st Thursday]
White Ribbon Day (Massachusetts) [1st Thursday]
World Book Day (Ireland, UK) [1st Thursday]
Independence Days
Texas (from Mexico; 1836)
Feast Days
Agnes of Bohemia (Christian; Saint)
Angela of the Cross (Christian; Saint)
Ascent of the Christ of the Gypsies (Alleluyas)
Ceadda (Celtic God of Healing Waters)
Chad of Mercia (a.k.a. Ceadda; Catholic Church, Anglican Communion, Eastern Orthodox Church)
Charles the Good, Count of Flanders (Christian; Blessed)
Democritus (Positivist; Saint)
Feast of 'Alá (Loftiness; Baha’i)
Holy Wells Day (Celtic)
Icovellauna Water Festival (Ouranian God of Ale Brewing)
Joavan (a.k.a. Joevin) (Christian; Saint)
John Maron (Christian; Saint)
Marnan of Scotland (Christian; Saint)
Mindfulness Day (Zen Buddhism)
Nineteen-Day Fast begins (a.k.a. Feast of 'Alá or Loftiness; Baha'i)
Omizu-okuri Festival ("Water Carrying;" Japan)
Paul (Muppetism)
Rule of St. Benedict Day
Simplicius (Christian; Saint)
Tagliatelle Day (Pastafarian)
Wonder Woman Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [14 of 71]
Prime Number Day: 61 [18 of 72]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [16 of 57]
Premieres
Against All Odds (Film; 1984)
Diner (Film; 1982)
Dude Duck (Disney Cartoon; 1951)
The Good Earth, by Pearl S. Buck (Novel; 1931)
The Hunt for Red October (Film; 1990)
I’m a Man, recorded by Bo Diddly (Song; 1955)
King Kong (Film; 1933)
London Has Fallen (Film; 2016)
The Lorax (Animated Film; 2012)
The Mexican (Film; 2001)
Norma Rae (Film; 1979)
Red Sparrow (Film; 2018)
Repo Man (Film; 1984)
The Sound of Music (Film; 1965)
Stagecoach (Film; 1939)
This Is Spinal Tap (Mockumentary Film; 1984)
Trio, by Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton & Linda Ronstadt (Album; 1987)
Twist and Shout, by The Beatles (Song; 1964)
Under the Bridge, by the Red Hot Chili Peppers (Song; 1992)
Venus in Furs, by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch (Novella; 1870)
Zodiac (Film; 2007)
Today’s Name Days
Agnes, Karl (Austria)
Čedomil, Ines, Iskra, Lucije (Croatia)
Anežka (Czech Republic)
Simplicius (Denmark)
Virge, Virgi, Virma, Virme, Virve, Virvi (Estonia)
Fanni, Fiona, Virva, Virve (Finland)
Charles (France)
Agnes, Karl, Volker (Germany)
Efthalia, Evthalia, Troadios (Greece)
Lujza (Hungary)
Ava, Basileo, Simpilicio (Italy)
Laila, Lavīze, Luīze (Latvia)
Dautara, Eitautas, Elena, Marcelinas (Lithuania)
Erna, Ernst (Norway)
Absalon, Franciszek, Halszka, Helena, Henryk, Januaria, Krzysztof, Lew, Michał, Paweł, Piotr, Radosław, Symplicjusz (Poland)
Nicolae, Teodot (Romania)
Anežka (Slovakia)
Simplicio (Spain)
Erna, Ernst (Sweden)
Absalom, Aksel, Axel, Chad, Chadwick (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 61 of 2023; 304 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of week 9 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 12 of 28]
Chinese: Month 2 (Yi-Mao), Day 11 (Ji-Wei)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 9 Adar 5783
Islamic: 9 Sha’ban 1444
J Cal: 1 Ver; Oneday [1 of 30]
Julian: 17 February 2023
Moon: 80%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 5 Aristotle (3rd Month) [Democritus]
Runic Half Month: Tyr (Cosmic Pillar) [Day 7 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 72 of 90)
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 11 of 29)
Calendar Changes
Ver (J Calendar) [Month 3 of 12]
0 notes
brookstonalmanac · 2 years ago
Text
Holidays 3.2
Holidays
Adwa Day (Ethiopia)
Air Force Day (Sri Lanka)
American Citizenship Day (Puerto Rico)
Baloch Culture Day (Balochistan)
Claudette Colvin Day
Dia de la Ciudadania Americana (Puerto Rico)
Dr. Seuss Day
Everything Acts To Further Day
Give Up Easily Day
Guam History and Chamorro Heritage Day (Guam)
Highway Numbers Day
International Rescue Cat Awareness Day
Jamahiriya Day (Libya)
James Roland Webster Day (Anguilla)
Key Grip Day
Midnight at the Oasis Day (Arizona)
National Blackjack Day
National Salesperson Day
National Usher Syndrome Awareness Day (UK)
National Walter Day
Old Stuff Day
Peasants’ Day (Burma)
Read Across America Day [Weekday closest to 3.2]
She Decides Day
302 Day
The Toddle Waddle
University Mental Health and Wellbeing Day (UK)
Victory at Adwa Day (Ethiopia)
World Teen Mental Wellness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Banana Cream Pie Day
National Egg McMuffin Day
3.2 Beer Day
Welsh Venison Day
1st Thursday in March
National Hospitalist Day [1st Thursday]
National Vending Day [1st Thursday]
White Ribbon Day (Massachusetts) [1st Thursday]
World Book Day (Ireland, UK) [1st Thursday]
Independence Days
Texas (from Mexico; 1836)
Feast Days
Agnes of Bohemia (Christian; Saint)
Angela of the Cross (Christian; Saint)
Ascent of the Christ of the Gypsies (Alleluyas)
Ceadda (Celtic God of Healing Waters)
Chad of Mercia (a.k.a. Ceadda; Catholic Church, Anglican Communion, Eastern Orthodox Church)
Charles the Good, Count of Flanders (Christian; Blessed)
Democritus (Positivist; Saint)
Feast of 'Alá (Loftiness; Baha’i)
Holy Wells Day (Celtic)
Icovellauna Water Festival (Ouranian God of Ale Brewing)
Joavan (a.k.a. Joevin) (Christian; Saint)
John Maron (Christian; Saint)
Marnan of Scotland (Christian; Saint)
Mindfulness Day (Zen Buddhism)
Nineteen-Day Fast begins (a.k.a. Feast of 'Alá or Loftiness; Baha'i)
Omizu-okuri Festival ("Water Carrying;" Japan)
Paul (Muppetism)
Rule of St. Benedict Day
Simplicius (Christian; Saint)
Tagliatelle Day (Pastafarian)
Wonder Woman Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [14 of 71]
Prime Number Day: 61 [18 of 72]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [16 of 57]
Premieres
Against All Odds (Film; 1984)
Diner (Film; 1982)
Dude Duck (Disney Cartoon; 1951)
The Good Earth, by Pearl S. Buck (Novel; 1931)
The Hunt for Red October (Film; 1990)
I’m a Man, recorded by Bo Diddly (Song; 1955)
King Kong (Film; 1933)
London Has Fallen (Film; 2016)
The Lorax (Animated Film; 2012)
The Mexican (Film; 2001)
Norma Rae (Film; 1979)
Red Sparrow (Film; 2018)
Repo Man (Film; 1984)
The Sound of Music (Film; 1965)
Stagecoach (Film; 1939)
This Is Spinal Tap (Mockumentary Film; 1984)
Trio, by Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton & Linda Ronstadt (Album; 1987)
Twist and Shout, by The Beatles (Song; 1964)
Under the Bridge, by the Red Hot Chili Peppers (Song; 1992)
Venus in Furs, by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch (Novella; 1870)
Zodiac (Film; 2007)
Today’s Name Days
Agnes, Karl (Austria)
Čedomil, Ines, Iskra, Lucije (Croatia)
Anežka (Czech Republic)
Simplicius (Denmark)
Virge, Virgi, Virma, Virme, Virve, Virvi (Estonia)
Fanni, Fiona, Virva, Virve (Finland)
Charles (France)
Agnes, Karl, Volker (Germany)
Efthalia, Evthalia, Troadios (Greece)
Lujza (Hungary)
Ava, Basileo, Simpilicio (Italy)
Laila, Lavīze, Luīze (Latvia)
Dautara, Eitautas, Elena, Marcelinas (Lithuania)
Erna, Ernst (Norway)
Absalon, Franciszek, Halszka, Helena, Henryk, Januaria, Krzysztof, Lew, Michał, Paweł, Piotr, Radosław, Symplicjusz (Poland)
Nicolae, Teodot (Romania)
Anežka (Slovakia)
Simplicio (Spain)
Erna, Ernst (Sweden)
Absalom, Aksel, Axel, Chad, Chadwick (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 61 of 2023; 304 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of week 9 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 12 of 28]
Chinese: Month 2 (Yi-Mao), Day 11 (Ji-Wei)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 9 Adar 5783
Islamic: 9 Sha’ban 1444
J Cal: 1 Ver; Oneday [1 of 30]
Julian: 17 February 2023
Moon: 80%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 5 Aristotle (3rd Month) [Democritus]
Runic Half Month: Tyr (Cosmic Pillar) [Day 7 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 72 of 90)
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 11 of 29)
Calendar Changes
Ver (J Calendar) [Month 3 of 12]
0 notes