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On this day

August 9

Nagasaki Bombed: Second Nuclear Strike Ends the War (1945). Nixon Resigns: First President Forced from Office (1974). Notable births include John Dryden (1631), Thomas Telford (1757), Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton (1757).

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Nagasaki Bombed: Second Nuclear Strike Ends the War
1945Event

Nagasaki Bombed: Second Nuclear Strike Ends the War

Kokura was the primary target on August 9, 1945, but thick cloud cover over the city forced Major Charles Sweeney to divert his B-29 Bockscar to the secondary target: Nagasaki. The plutonium bomb "Fat Man" detonated at 11:02 a.m., 1,650 feet above the Urakami Valley, home to the largest Catholic community in Japan. The Urakami Cathedral, the largest cathedral in East Asia, was destroyed with its congregation. The valley's hilly terrain contained the blast more than Hiroshima's flat topography had, but between 40,000 and 80,000 people were killed. Mitsubishi's torpedo and steel works were obliterated. Japan's Supreme War Council, meeting in Tokyo, remained deadlocked until Emperor Hirohito intervened to accept surrender on August 15.

Nixon Resigns: First President Forced from Office
1974

Nixon Resigns: First President Forced from Office

Richard Nixon resigned the presidency on August 9, 1974, effective at noon, and boarded a helicopter on the South Lawn of the White House. He gave a double V-for-victory sign from the doorway, a gesture that captured the defiance and self-delusion that had characterized his final months in office. Vice President Gerald Ford took the oath of office ninety minutes later. Nixon left behind a constitutional crisis that had exposed the limits of executive power and spawned 69 criminal indictments within his administration. The resignation established an enduring precedent: no president is above the law. Ford's pardon of Nixon one month later may have saved the nation from further trauma, but it cost Ford the 1976 election.

Singapore Born: A Nation Expelled into Independence
1965

Singapore Born: A Nation Expelled into Independence

Malaysian Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman informed Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew on August 7, 1965, that Singapore was being expelled from the Malaysian federation. Two days later, on August 9, Singapore became an independent nation against its own will. Lee Kuan Yew wept during the press conference. The tiny island of 1.9 million people, with no natural resources, no military, and no hinterland for food production, seemed destined for failure. Instead, Lee's government pursued aggressive industrialization, mandatory savings, public housing, and English-language education. Within three decades, Singapore's per capita GDP surpassed Britain's. The country that was thrown out of a federation became one of the wealthiest nations on Earth.

Jesse Owens Wins Fourth Gold: Smashing Nazi Myths
1936

Jesse Owens Wins Fourth Gold: Smashing Nazi Myths

Jesse Owens arrived in Berlin as one of 66 Black athletes on the American team, and Hitler's propaganda machine had spent months promoting the Games as proof of Aryan superiority. Owens won the 100 meters, the 200 meters, the long jump, and the 4x100 relay, becoming the first American to win four gold medals at a single Olympics. The long jump victory came with an assist from German competitor Luz Long, who advised Owens to move his takeoff mark back after two fouls. Owens won; Long took silver and embraced him in front of 110,000 spectators. Owens returned home to a nation that celebrated him briefly, then expected him to use the freight elevator at his own reception at the Waldorf-Astoria.

Gandhi Arrested: Quit India Movement Erupts
1942

Gandhi Arrested: Quit India Movement Erupts

British authorities arrested Mohandas Gandhi at Bombay's Birla House before dawn on August 9, 1942, just hours after he had launched the Quit India resolution demanding immediate British withdrawal from India. The arrest was pre-planned: the government had prepared internment camps and emergency powers well in advance. Gandhi's imprisonment triggered the most violent mass uprising in Indian colonial history. Workers struck, students rioted, and saboteurs destroyed telegraph lines and railway tracks across the country. British forces responded with aerial strafing, mass arrests, and public floggings. Over 100,000 people were imprisoned. Gandhi spent the next 21 months in the Aga Khan Palace in Pune, where his wife Kasturba died in his arms in February 1944.

Quote of the Day

“The state should, I think, be called 'anesthesia.' This signifies insensibility.”

William T. G. Morton

Historical events

Born on August 9

Portrait of Ryoo Seung-bum
Ryoo Seung-bum 1980

Ryoo Seung-bum grew up watching his older sister Ryoo Seung-ryong become one of Korea's most celebrated directors, and…

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then he became one of Korea's most celebrated actors. He's appeared in films by Bong Joon-ho and Park Chan-wook. His performance in Crying Fist in 2005 — a former Asian Games silver medalist who becomes a street fighter — earned him serious awards attention. The acting family that quietly produced some of Korea's best cinema. Born in Seoul in 1980.

Portrait of Juanes
Juanes 1972

Juanes wrote his biggest songs in Spanish at a time when Latin pop meant something more polished and radio-ready.

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He chose rock guitars, real emotion, and Colombian identity. "La Camisa Negra" topped charts in Spain for twenty-five weeks — a record. He's won twenty-six Grammy Awards, both Latin and mainstream. In 2009, he organized a free peace concert in Havana that drew a million people. One musician, one concert, one island. Born in Medellín, Colombia, in 1972.

Portrait of Thomas Lennon
Thomas Lennon 1970

and wrote Night at the Museum.

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He also spent years playing Lieutenant Jim Dangle — short shorts, mustache, oblivious authority — in a mockumentary that ran for six seasons and launched a career in comedy writing that would make him one of the more prolific screenwriters in Hollywood. He's been in dozens of films as a character actor, usually for two minutes, usually stealing the scene. Born in Oak Park, Illinois, in 1970.

Portrait of John Key
John Key 1961

He grew up in a state house in Christchurch after his father died when he was seven — then made $50 million trading…

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currencies before most people had heard of foreign exchange markets. John Key became New Zealand's Prime Minister in 2008 without ever holding a Cabinet post first. Skipped the usual ladder entirely. He served nearly eight years, winning three consecutive elections, before resigning in 2016 — still popular, which almost never happens. The state-house kid ended up knighted.

Portrait of Jean Tirole
Jean Tirole 1953

He almost became a mathematician.

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Jean Tirole earned his first doctorate in math before pivoting to economics — and that precision followed him everywhere. He spent decades at the Toulouse School of Economics reshaping how governments think about regulating monopolies and financial markets. In 2014, the Royal Swedish Academy handed him the Nobel Prize in Economics alone — no co-laureate. His work on market power and incentives now sits inside actual policy frameworks across Europe. The mathematician never really left; he just found bigger equations.

Portrait of Benjamin Orr
Benjamin Orr 1947

Benjamin Orr played bass and sang lead on 'Drive,' the Cars' biggest hit.

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His voice had a cool sadness that fit the song exactly. He sang it reluctantly — he said he didn't think it was a Cars song. It went to number three in 1984 and was later used in Live Aid footage of Ethiopian famine victims, giving it a second, heavier life. Orr died of pancreatic cancer in 2000 at fifty-three.

Portrait of Romano Prodi
Romano Prodi 1939

Romano Prodi steered Italy through the transition to the euro as Prime Minister and later centralized European economic…

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policy as President of the European Commission. His leadership integrated the continent’s markets more deeply than any predecessor, binding the economies of member states into a single, cohesive financial bloc.

Portrait of Patrick Tse
Patrick Tse 1936

He was so famous in 1960s Hong Kong that teenage girls mobbed his car and tore off the door handles.

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Patrick Tse Yin became the colony's first homegrown superstar, commanding fees no local actor had seen before. Studios built films around his face alone. He didn't just act — he directed, produced, wrote. Decades later, his son Nicholas Tse inherited the spotlight, making Patrick the rare star who watched his own fame get eclipsed by his own bloodline.

Portrait of Robert Shaw
Robert Shaw 1927

Robert Shaw brought a menacing, coiled intensity to the screen, most memorably as the shark-obsessed Quint in Jaws and…

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the calculating mob boss in The Sting. Beyond his acting, he penned the acclaimed novel The Sun Doctor, proving his prowess as both a novelist and a playwright before his sudden death at age 51.

Portrait of Tove Jansson
Tove Jansson 1914

She invented the Moomins during World War II bombing raids, sketching round, hippo-like creatures in the margins of her…

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philosophy notes as Helsinki shook. Tove Jansson was 30 when the first book appeared in 1945, and she'd keep writing them for 25 more years. But she always insisted the stories weren't for children — they were about loneliness, loss, and finding your people anyway. She left behind nine novels, a devoted global following, and a theme park in Finland that draws 200,000 visitors every year.

Portrait of Thomas Telford
Thomas Telford 1757

He started as a shepherd's son who taught himself stonecutting in rural Eskdale, Scotland — yet Thomas Telford…

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eventually built more miles of road than any single engineer in British history: over 1,000 miles across the Scottish Highlands alone. His Menai Suspension Bridge, completed in 1826, stretched 580 feet across the strait — the longest suspension span on Earth at that moment. Engineers studied its chain-link design for decades. But Telford never married, never had children. His roads were his family.

Portrait of Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton
Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton 1757

She outlived her husband by 50 years — and spent every single one of them making sure history remembered him correctly.

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Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton, born in 1757, co-founded New York's first private orphanage at 62, personally interviewing children for admission. She lobbied Congress for decades to preserve Alexander's papers. She didn't stop until she was 97. When she finally died in 1854, she left behind thousands of preserved documents — the raw material every Hamilton biographer since has depended on.

Portrait of John Dryden
John Dryden 1631

He was so dominant that his entire era got named after him — but John Dryden was nearly broke for most of it.

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Born in Aldwincle, Northamptonshire in 1631, he held the Poet Laureate title for 18 years, then lost it overnight when he refused to swear loyalty to the new Protestant king. Just like that. No pension, no position, 58 years old. He spent his final decade translating Virgil to pay rent. That translation became the standard English Virgil for over a century.

Died on August 9

Portrait of Robbie Robertson
Robbie Robertson 2023

He wrote "The Weight" in about an hour, sitting at a piano he barely played, pulling names like Nazareth and Fanny from…

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a list of random words. Robbie Robertson built The Band's sound from Mississippi Delta mud and Canadian prairie dust — something that shouldn't work but absolutely did. He spent his final decades scoring Scorsese films, a partnership stretching across fifty years and dozens of projects. He died at 80. The Weight is still playing somewhere right now.

Portrait of Bernie Mac
Bernie Mac 2008

Bernie Mac performed stand-up comedy for fifteen years before most of America knew who he was.

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His first major television exposure came on Def Comedy Jam, and he stopped the show cold with a set that began: "I ain't scared of you." He said it three times. The audience stopped laughing and started listening. The Kings of Comedy concert film came out in 2000. The Bernie Mac Show ran from 2001 to 2006. He won a Peabody Award. He died on August 9, 2008, from pneumonia complications from sarcoidosis. He was 50.

Portrait of Mahmoud Darwish
Mahmoud Darwish 2008

He carried an Israeli ID card for years — a Palestinian poet forced to prove citizenship in a state he wrote against.

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Darwish resigned from the PLO executive committee in 1993 over Oslo, believing the deal surrendered too much. He'd been exiled, jailed, stateless. His poem "Identity Card" — written at 20 — became a rallying cry across the Arab world. He died after open-heart surgery in Houston, Texas. He left behind over 30 collections. Palestine's national poet never lived to see a Palestinian state.

Portrait of Frank Whittle
Frank Whittle 1996

He submitted his jet engine patent in 1930 — and the British government let it lapse in 1935 because they wouldn't pay the £5 renewal fee.

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Five pounds. Whittle watched Germany develop similar technology while his own country ignored him. When his W.1 engine finally flew in 1941, he was running on amphetamines and the edge of a nervous breakdown. He died a retired RAF Air Commodore, never having earned real wealth from his invention. Every commercial flight since owes him that £5.

Portrait of Jerry Garcia
Jerry Garcia 1995

Jerry Garcia died at 53 in a drug rehabilitation center in Forest Knolls, California, having checked in two days earlier.

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His heart gave out. The Grateful Dead had played their last concert three weeks before. Garcia had carried the band and its mythology for three decades — the long improvisational jams, the devoted traveling fanbase, the countercultural permanence of it — while fighting heroin addiction in a way that was public enough that it became part of the mythology too. The band dissolved within weeks. Some of them never stopped playing his songs.

Portrait of Ramón Valdés
Ramón Valdés 1988

Ramón Valdés played Señor Barriga on El Chavo del 8 — the landlord who was always getting hit or humiliated or having…

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his money stolen by children. The show was a Mexican comedy series that became the most watched Spanish-language television program in history, with an estimated 91 million daily viewers at its peak. Valdés played a supporting role that became beloved across Latin America. He died in Guadalajara in 1988. His character, in animated form, is still broadcast today.

Portrait of C. F. Powell
C. F. Powell 1969

Cecil Powell revolutionized particle physics by developing the photographic emulsion technique that captured the existence of the pi-meson.

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His discovery of this subatomic particle confirmed the mechanism binding the atomic nucleus together, earning him the 1949 Nobel Prize in Physics. He died while on holiday in Italy, leaving behind a deeper understanding of the fundamental forces of nature.

Portrait of Sharon Tate
Sharon Tate 1969

She was eight and a half months pregnant when Charles Manson's followers broke into 10050 Cielo Drive.

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Sharon Tate begged her killers to let her live long enough to have the baby. They didn't. She was 26. Her father, Army Colonel Paul Tate, shaved his beard, grew his hair long, and spent years infiltrating hippie communities hunting her killers himself. The murders effectively ended the 1960s counterculture's innocence — not a metaphor, but a documented cultural shift journalists noted within weeks.

Portrait of Hermann Hesse
Hermann Hesse 1962

He almost became a bookseller instead.

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After a mental breakdown at 15 and a failed seminary escape, Hesse spent years selling used books in Tübingen before *Peter Camenzind* bought him a writing life. He'd eventually produce *Steppenwolf* and *Siddhartha* from a stone house in Montagnola, Switzerland, where he lived 43 years. The Nobel came in 1946. He died quietly there on August 9th, 1962, at 85. But his real surge came after — American college students in the 1960s made *Siddhartha* a counterculture bible he never lived to see.

Portrait of Hugo Boss
Hugo Boss 1948

Hugo Boss founded his clothing company in 1924 and kept it alive during the Depression by manufacturing uniforms for…

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the Nazi Party, the SS, and the Hitler Youth — a history the company did not publicly acknowledge until the late 1990s. Boss himself was an early NSDAP member. The luxury brand that carries his name today bears little resemblance to its origins.

Portrait of John Charles Fields
John Charles Fields 1932

He never got to hand out the award himself.

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Fields died in August 1932, just months before the International Congress of Mathematicians formally approved the medal he'd spent years lobbying for — funding it partly from leftover money he'd managed after organizing the 1924 Toronto Congress. He left $47,000 to establish the prize. First awarded in 1936, it became mathematics' closest equivalent to a Nobel. The man who created the world's highest math honor never witnessed a single ceremony.

Portrait of Ruggero Leoncavallo
Ruggero Leoncavallo 1919

He wrote *Pagliacci* in a single furious year, partly to prove critics wrong after a plagiarism dispute nearly ended his career.

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The opera premiered in 1892 and became one of the most performed works in history. But Leoncavallo never topped it. He churned out a dozen more operas, watched them fail, and died in 1919 still chasing that first lightning strike. He even wrote a competing *La Bohème* — same story as Puccini's, released the same year. Puccini's version buried his. One hit defined him. One rival finished him.

Portrait of Trajan
Trajan 117

He died without naming an heir — at least, that's what half of Rome suspected.

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Trajan, the emperor who'd stretched Roman territory to its absolute maximum, collapsed from a stroke in Selinus, a small coastal town in Cilicia, far from both his armies and his capital. His wife Plotina announced his adoption of Hadrian only after he'd lost consciousness. Convenient timing. Trajan left behind Dacia, Arabia, and 2,500 miles of new frontier — and a succession nobody quite believed was legitimate.

Holidays & observances

Finland celebrates its national art and the enduring imagination of Tove Jansson every August 9.

Finland celebrates its national art and the enduring imagination of Tove Jansson every August 9. By honoring the creator of the Moomins on her birthday, the country recognizes how her whimsical illustrations and philosophical storytelling transformed Finnish literature into a global cultural export that resonates with readers of all ages.

Orthodox Christians honor Saint Panteleimon today, a physician who allegedly healed the blind and cured the incurable…

Orthodox Christians honor Saint Panteleimon today, a physician who allegedly healed the blind and cured the incurable through prayer. His veneration remains a cornerstone of Russian medical tradition, as believers invoke his intercession for the sick and for the success of complex surgeries.

Secundian, Marcellian, and Verian were early Christian martyrs killed during the Roman persecutions, honored as saint…

Secundian, Marcellian, and Verian were early Christian martyrs killed during the Roman persecutions, honored as saints in the Roman Catholic tradition. Their story belongs to the vast roster of ancient martyrs whose courage under persecution shaped the identity of the early church.

Nath I of Achonry was a 5th-century Irish saint associated with the diocese of Achonry in County Sligo.

Nath I of Achonry was a 5th-century Irish saint associated with the diocese of Achonry in County Sligo. He is said to have been a disciple of Saint Patrick, and his feast day preserves the memory of early Irish Christianity's web of local saints and monastic founders.

Mary Sumner founded the Mothers' Union in 1876, starting with a single parish meeting in Winchester, England.

Mary Sumner founded the Mothers' Union in 1876, starting with a single parish meeting in Winchester, England. The organization grew to 4 million members across 83 countries, making it one of the largest women's organizations in the Anglican Communion. She was 93 when she died.

Orthodox Christians honor Herman of Alaska, the humble monk who spent decades living on Spruce Island to protect the …

Orthodox Christians honor Herman of Alaska, the humble monk who spent decades living on Spruce Island to protect the Aleut people from the exploitation of Russian fur traders. His advocacy for indigenous rights and his simple, ascetic life established the foundation for the Orthodox Church in North America, bridging cultural divides between settlers and native communities.

Firmus and Rusticus are early Christian martyrs venerated primarily in the region around Verona, Italy.

Firmus and Rusticus are early Christian martyrs venerated primarily in the region around Verona, Italy. Their cult dates to the early centuries of the church, and they are honored as examples of steadfast faith under Roman persecution.

Edith Stein was a German Jewish philosopher who converted to Catholicism, became a Carmelite nun, and was murdered at…

Edith Stein was a German Jewish philosopher who converted to Catholicism, became a Carmelite nun, and was murdered at Auschwitz in 1942. Pope John Paul II canonized her in 1998 — a decision that drew both praise and controversy, as some Jewish leaders argued her death was a result of her Jewish heritage, not her Christian faith.

August 9 in the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar commemorates the Apostle Matthias, who was chosen by lot to repl…

August 9 in the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar commemorates the Apostle Matthias, who was chosen by lot to replace Judas Iscariot among the Twelve Apostles. The day also honors several other saints and martyrs venerated in the Orthodox tradition.

Saints Firmus and Rusticus were martyred in the early Christian church, their execution an act of Roman religious enf…

Saints Firmus and Rusticus were martyred in the early Christian church, their execution an act of Roman religious enforcement. Two names in the calendar of saints, remembered because the church kept records when most deaths of the era did not. Their feast day has been observed for over 1,600 years, which means this commemoration has outlasted the empire that killed them.

Jean Vianney was the patron saint of parish priests — a man who spent forty years in the small French village of Ars …

Jean Vianney was the patron saint of parish priests — a man who spent forty years in the small French village of Ars hearing confessions. He sometimes heard confession for sixteen hours a day. Pilgrims came from across Europe specifically to confess to him. He tried to run away multiple times because the crowds overwhelmed him. He always came back. He died in 1859. Pope John Paul II made him patron of all priests in 2009, 150 years after his death.

Saint Nathy, also known as David, served as bishop of Achonry in County Roscommon — one of the smaller Irish dioceses…

Saint Nathy, also known as David, served as bishop of Achonry in County Roscommon — one of the smaller Irish dioceses, in a country full of early Christian bishops who built monasteries and kept learning alive through centuries when much of Europe was in chaos. Achonry is still a Catholic diocese today. Nathy's feast day is a thread connecting the modern church to its Irish roots in the fifth or sixth century.

Romanus Ostiarius — Romanus the Doorkeeper — was a Roman soldier converted to Christianity by the martyr Lawrence bef…

Romanus Ostiarius — Romanus the Doorkeeper — was a Roman soldier converted to Christianity by the martyr Lawrence before Lawrence's own execution in 258. The story says Romanus witnessed Lawrence's death, demanded baptism on the spot, and was beheaded the following day. The church kept his name because the act of conversion under immediate threat of death was exactly the kind of faith the early martyrology was built to commemorate.

Saints Secundianus, Marcellianus, and Verianus were martyred in ancient Spoleto in Umbria — a town that now hosts ope…

Saints Secundianus, Marcellianus, and Verianus were martyred in ancient Spoleto in Umbria — a town that now hosts opera festivals and medieval festivals, and once executed Christians. Three names in the Roman Martyrology, their feast day maintained by the church for over 1,700 years. Their story survives not as history but as devotion. The date belongs to them.

In the Roman Catholic calendar, August 9 commemorates several saints whose feast days accumulated over the centuries …

In the Roman Catholic calendar, August 9 commemorates several saints whose feast days accumulated over the centuries as the church documented its martyrs and confessors. The calendar of saints is a form of institutional memory — names kept alive through annual observance when written records alone would have lost them.

Singapore's National Day marks August 9, 1965 — the day the country was expelled from Malaysia and became independent…

Singapore's National Day marks August 9, 1965 — the day the country was expelled from Malaysia and became independent without having asked for independence. Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew wept at the press conference announcing separation. He had spent years trying to keep Singapore part of Malaysia. The expulsion was, in his words, a moment of anguish. In sixty years, Singapore became one of the wealthiest countries in the world per capita. The separation he mourned produced the country he built.

South Africa's National Women's Day commemorates August 9, 1956, when 20,000 women marched to the Union Buildings in …

South Africa's National Women's Day commemorates August 9, 1956, when 20,000 women marched to the Union Buildings in Pretoria to protest pass laws that required Black South Africans to carry identification documents at all times. They delivered petitions with 100,000 signatures to the Prime Minister's office. He wasn't there. They stood in silence for thirty minutes and sang a protest song. The pass laws stayed for another thirty years. The march is remembered because the women who staged it refused to be forgotten.

The International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples falls on August 9 to mark the first meeting of the UN Working…

The International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples falls on August 9 to mark the first meeting of the UN Working Group on Indigenous Populations in 1982. There are approximately 476 million indigenous people worldwide, in 90 countries, speaking 4,000 languages. They represent 5 percent of the global population and 15 percent of those living in extreme poverty. The day is an acknowledgment of that disproportion. Not a solution. An acknowledgment.

Canada's National Peacekeepers' Day, observed on August 9, honors Canadians who have served in UN peacekeeping operat…

Canada's National Peacekeepers' Day, observed on August 9, honors Canadians who have served in UN peacekeeping operations around the world. Canada was a founding contributor to UN peacekeeping — Lester Pearson proposed the concept during the 1956 Suez Crisis and won the Nobel Peace Prize for it. More than 125,000 Canadians have served in peacekeeping missions since. The date was chosen to mark a 1974 ambush in Cyprus that killed nine Canadian soldiers.

Russia's Battle of Gangut Day commemorates the Russian Navy's first major naval victory, when Peter the Great's galle…

Russia's Battle of Gangut Day commemorates the Russian Navy's first major naval victory, when Peter the Great's galley fleet defeated a Swedish squadron off Cape Gangut (Hanko) in 1714. The victory established Russia as a Baltic Sea naval power during the Great Northern War.

Brussels and Leuven residents haul a massive, freshly cut beech tree through their streets to celebrate the Meyboom, …

Brussels and Leuven residents haul a massive, freshly cut beech tree through their streets to celebrate the Meyboom, a tradition dating back to 1213. This festive ritual commemorates a victory over local rivals, securing the city's right to plant the tree before sunset to maintain their historical privilege of holding the annual market.

Singaporeans celebrate National Day to commemorate their 1965 separation from Malaysia, an abrupt exit that left the …

Singaporeans celebrate National Day to commemorate their 1965 separation from Malaysia, an abrupt exit that left the tiny island nation without natural resources or a hinterland. This forced autonomy compelled the government to pursue rapid industrialization and global trade, transforming a vulnerable city-state into one of the world’s most prosperous and stable economic hubs.

Canada's National Peacekeepers' Day honors the more than 125,000 Canadians who have served in United Nations and othe…

Canada's National Peacekeepers' Day honors the more than 125,000 Canadians who have served in United Nations and other international peace operations since 1947. Observed on the Sunday closest to August 9, it recognizes the country's long tradition of peacekeeping, a concept Canadian diplomat Lester Pearson helped pioneer.