nPosted on December 16, 2017
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Key Points
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nThis public holiday was created in 1994 in an effort to start a healing process. You see, the nation had just (finally!) ended apartheid, which was a system of segregation and discrimination that had been used in South Africa to keep black people (and other people of color) separate from white people and in an inferior position as far as power and money were concerned. Apartheid had been the rule of the land for about half a century, and the wounds were going to be hard to heal…
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n…The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, working with President Nelson Mandela, carefully chose a date that was already meaningful to (white) Afrikaners and to (black) Africans.
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nThe idea was to create more unity.
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nSome of the festivities include parades and ceremonies. In the past, a statue of Mandela was unveiled, inscriptions of war heroes’ names were honored, and a victim of ethnic strife was honored with a tombstone.
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Children are the hope for the future. Can we raise kids to love more than fear and hate? Can we give them equal access and equal opportunity? |
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nAlso on this date:
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nNational Day in Bahrain
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nAuthor Jane Austen’s birthday
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nScientist and author Arthur C. Clarke’s birthday
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nAnniversary of the invention of the transistor
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nBeethoven’s Birthday
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nMargaret Mead’s Birthday
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nAnniversary of Boston Tea Party
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nCheck out my Pinterest pages on:
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nHistorical anniversaries in December
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nAnd here are my Pinterest boards for:
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nJanuary birthdays
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