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Archive for the ‘Holidays/Celebrations’ Category

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Happy Earth Day!

Thursday, April 22nd, 2021
Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg Credit: © Alexandros Michailidis, Shutterstock

Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg
Credit: © Alexandros Michailidis, Shutterstock

April 22 is Earth Day, an annual observance to increase public awareness of environmental issues. Each year on Earth Day, millions of people throughout the world gather to clean up litter, protest threats to the environment, and celebrate progress in reducing pollution.

Earth Day began in the United States. In 1969, the U.S. Senator Gaylord A. Nelson suggested that a day of environmental education be held on college campuses. The following year, the lawyer and environmentalist Denis Hayes, then a recent graduate of Stanford University, led hundreds of students in planning and organizing the observance of Earth Day on April 22, 1970. About 20 million people participated in this celebration.

The observance of Earth Day in 1970 helped alert people to the dangers of pollution and stimulated a new environmental movement. That same year, Congress created the Environmental Protection Agency to set and enforce pollution standards. Congress also passed the Clean Air Act of 1970, which limited the amount of air pollution that cars, utilities, and industries could release. Other new environmental laws soon followed.

One modern champion for the environment is the Swedish activist Greta Thunberg. She has worked to convince politicians to take action against climate change due to global warming. Global warming is an observed increase in Earth’s average surface temperature. As a teenager, Thunberg became known for her boldness in confronting adult politicians for their inaction on climate change. She has called upon leaders to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, mainly carbon dioxide. Such gases trap heat in the atmosphere, warming the planet’s surface.

Thunberg was born in Stockholm, Sweden, on Jan. 3, 2003. She was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder at a young age. As a child, she showed an interest in environmental issues. She convinced her family to reduce their carbon footprint by becoming vegan and giving up air travel. Carbon footprint is a measure of the greenhouse gas emissions associated with human activities.

In 2018, at the age of 15, Thunberg protested for action on climate change outside the Swedish parliament, inspiring other student protesters. Together, they organized school strikes to demand action on climate change. In August 2019, Thunberg sailed across the Atlantic Ocean from Plymouth, in the United Kingdom, to New York City, in the United States, on a “carbon neutral” voyage. Thunberg sailed aboard a yacht that got its electric power from solar panels and underwater turbines. While in the United States, she addressed the United Nations as part of its Climate Action Summit. During her speech, she announced that she and a group of other children were filing a lawsuit against five nations not on track to meet their emission-reduction targets under the Paris Agreement. The Paris Agreement is a global treaty designed to fight global warming.

 

 

Tags: conservation, denis hayes, earth day, environment, gaylord nelson, greta thunberg
Posted in Conservation, Current Events, Environment, Holidays/Celebrations, People | Comments Off

Ramadan Begins

Monday, April 12th, 2021

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The evening of Monday, April 12, marks the beginning of Ramadan in the United States. Ramadan is an Islamic holy month when Muslims may not eat or drink from morning until night. Muslims celebrate Ramadan as the month in which the prophet Muhammad received the first of the revelations that make up the Qur’ān, the holy book of Islam.

Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic year. Because the Islamic calendar is based on cycles of the moon—rather than the sun, like the Western Gregorian calendar—Ramadan does not fall at the same time each year. This year, Ramadan began the evening of April 12 and ends on the evening of May 12.

The term Ramadan comes from the word Ramz, meaning great heat or burning. Ramadan is believed to cleanse a person of sins. Muslims are supposed to seek forgiveness from God during this month.

All Muslims must fast if they have reached puberty and are of sound mind. Exceptions are made for some groups, such as the sick, the elderly, pregnant women, and travelers. Those who are able, however, must make up the missed fast days at a later time. A Muslim who deliberately breaks the fast must atone by fasting for two months or feeding the poor.

Fasting begins at dawn and lasts until sunset. During this time, Muslims cannot eat food or drink beverages. The daily fast is broken by a light meal called the iftar, followed by the evening prayer.

Fasting helps Muslims to experience and apply many teachings from the Qur’ān in their daily lives. Such teachings include compassion, self-control, and spiritual reflection. Fasting also teaches Muslims to sympathize with those who are less fortunate.

The nights during Ramadan are devoted to special prayers and to recitations from the Qur’ān. During the last 10 days, some Muslims seclude themselves in a mosque to devote time to prayer and religious contemplation. A mosque is a building used for Muslim worship. The end of Ramadan is celebrated by a great festival called Īd al-Fitr.

Like so many events this year, Ramadan might look different than in years past. In many places, efforts are being made to prevent the spread of the pandemic (global outbreak) of the coronavirus disease COVID-19. Such efforts often include social distancing, meant to limit contact among people and thus the spread of germs. But, limiting the spread of germs doesn’t mean you can’t observe Ramadan!

One socially distant way to participate in Ramadan is to attend virtual prayer sessions. You can also learn about Islamic art. You might not be able to build a fantastic mosque on your kitchen table. But you can use clay to replicate craftworkers’ detailed carved wood patterns. In Islamic art, wood has been used for doors, boxes, ceilings, panels, prayer niches, and pulpits. Woodworkers often carved elaborate inserts into a plain geometrical framework of star designs. However you choose to observe, we hope you have a safe and spiritual Ramadan!

Tags: islam, muhammad, muslims, ramadan
Posted in Current Events, Holidays/Celebrations | Comments Off

National Poetry Month: Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Monday, April 12th, 2021
American poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti Credit: © Robert Altman, Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

American poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Credit: © Robert Altman, Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

April is National Poetry Month, an annual celebration of this unique form of literature. Each week, Behind the Headlines will feature the art of poetry or a famous poet.

San Francisco, California, is home to such famous landmarks as Alcatraz, the Golden Gate Bridge, and City Lights bookstore. In 1953, the independent bookstore was founded by the American poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1919-2021) and his friend Peter Martin. The store became a gathering place for the Beat movement and other avant-garde (experimental) writers and artists of the 1950’s. The Beats were writers who disapproved of commercialism and middle-class American values. Ferlinghetti was best known as a leader of the Beat movement.

Ferlinghetti wrote in colloquial (conversational) free verse. Free verse is a style of poetry that does not follow traditional rules of poetry composition. His poetry describes the need to release literature and life from conformity and timidity. The grotesque and a feeling of intense excitement are combined in his work, especially in his most famous poetry collection, A Coney Island of the Mind (1958). The collection is also a satiric criticism of American culture. Satire is the use of wit to attack human conduct or institutions.

Lawrence Monsanto Ferling was born on March 24, 1919, in Yonkers, New York. His father, an Italian immigrant, had shortened the family name, Ferlinghetti, after coming to the United States. As an adult, Lawrence learned about his father’s original name and eventually took it as his own. He graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1941 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. After serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II (1939-1945), he earned a master’s degree in literature from Columbia University in 1947 and a doctorate degree in literature from the Sorbonne in Paris, France, in 1950.

When he returned to the United States, Ferlinghetti settled in San Francisco, California. There, in 1953, he and Peter Martin established the City Lights bookstore. In 1955, Ferlinghetti started a publishing company, also called City Lights. He published his own first volume of poetry, Pictures of the Gone World (1955), as well as works by Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, Kenneth Rexroth, and others.

Ferlinghetti’s other collections of poetry include Endless Life: Selected Poems (1981); These Are My Rivers: New and Selected Poems, 1955-1993 (1993); A Far Rockaway of the Heart (1997); and How to Paint Sunlight: Lyric Poems and Others, 1997-2000 and San Francisco Poems (both 2001). His novels include Her (1960) and Love in the Days of Rage (1988). Poetry as Insurgent Art (2007) contains his writings on the nature of poetry. Writing Across the Landscape (2015) is a collection of travel journal entries written from 1960 to 2010. In 2019, Ferlinghetti published Little Boy, an autobiographical prose poem. He also published plays and composed oral messages—poems to be spoken to jazz accompaniment. Ferlinghetti died on Feb. 22, 2021.

Tags: beat movement, city lights bookstore, lawrence ferlinghetti, national poetry month, san francisco
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National Poetry Month: Haiku

Thursday, April 8th, 2021
Statue of the haiku poet Basho in Iwate, Japan © beibaoke, Shutterstock

Statue of the haiku poet Basho in Iwate, Japan
© beibaoke, Shutterstock

April is National Poetry Month, an annual celebration of this unique form of literature. Each week, Behind the Headlines will feature the art of poetry or a famous poet.

Haiku (pronounced hy koo) is a popular form of Japanese poetry. In Japanese, a haiku consists of 17 syllables arranged in three unrhymed lines. The first and third lines have 5 syllables, and the second line has 7 syllables. A haiku typically tries to create an impression or mood. Haiku themes are generally simple and deal with everyday situations and sensations. However, the poet tends to hint at them rather than treat them in a plain, direct manner.

According to Japanese tradition, each haiku must contain a kigo—that is, a word that indicates the season in which the poem is set. Some kigo are obvious, such as snow to indicate winter. Others are less obvious. For example, the word balloon can indicate spring.

Haiku originated in the 1600’s as the first three lines, called hokku, that served as the opening stanza of a longer poem. From the late 1600’s to the early 1800’s, the Japanese poets Matsuo Basho, Yosa Buson, and Kobayashi Issa composed classic hokku. Basho composed the following lines during the late 1600’s:

Temple bells die out.

The fragrant blossoms remain.

A perfect evening!

In 1892, the poet and journalist Masaoka Shiki published rules that established haiku as an independent form of poetry rather than a part of a longer work of verse.

You can try writing your own haiku! In many parts of the world, spring has arrived. You could write a haiku about the blossoming flowers in a park or the chirping birds outside your window. When you’re done, read your poem to your musical bird friends!

 

Tags: basho, buson, haiku, issa, kigo, national poetry month, poetry
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National Poetry Month: Amanda Gorman

Monday, April 5th, 2021

 

American poet Amanda Gorman Credit: © Kathy Hutchins, Shutterstock

American poet Amanda Gorman
Credit: © Kathy Hutchins, Shutterstock

 

April is National Poetry Month, an annual celebration of this unique form of literature. Each week, Behind the Headlines will feature the art of poetry or a famous poet. 

On January 20, Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th president of the United States. On the west front of the United States Capitol, musicians performed, religious leaders prayed, and a new president delivered an inaugural address. Among the many speakers was the American poet Amanda Gorman. A 22-year-old Black woman, Gorman became the youngest poet to read at a presidential inauguration.

 

The poem, titled “The Hill We Climb,” was written for the occasion and referenced the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, just two weeks before the inauguration. In the attack, rioters supporting outgoing President Donald Trump stormed the building in an attempt to stop the certification of the 2020 presidential election, which Biden won. Gorman’s poem read in part:

 

We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation rather than share it,

 

Would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy.

 

And this effort very nearly succeeded.

 

But while democracy can be periodically delayed,

 

It can never be permanently defeated.

 

In this truth, in this faith, we trust.

 

For while we have our eyes on the future,

 

history has its eyes on us.

 

Many observers described Gorman’s performance as extremely moving, bringing the poem’s beautiful, powerful words to life. Her expressive voice guided listeners through the past, present, and future of the United States. The poem and her performance were met with much acclaim.

 

Gorman was born in 1998 in Los Angeles, California. She struggled with a speech impediment as a child. Gorman studied at Harvard University. She had her first published collection of poetry with The One for Whom Food Is Not Enough (2015). Her work includes themes of feminism and racial oppression. In 2017, she was named the first U.S. National Youth Poet Laureate by the youth writing program Urban Word NYC in cooperation with the Library of Congress.

 

Gorman became one of only a few poets to perform at a presidential inauguration, joining such legends as Maya Angelou and Robert Frost. In 1993, Angelou performed the poem “On the Pulse of Morning” at the inauguration of President Bill Clinton. Frost recited his poem “The Gift Outright” at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy.

Tags: amanda gorman, inauguration, joe biden, national poetry month, the hill we climb
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International Children’s Book Day: Remembering Beverly Cleary

Friday, April 2nd, 2021
American children's author Beverly Cleary Credit: State Library Photograph Collection, Washington State Archives

American children’s author Beverly Cleary
Credit: State Library Photograph Collection, Washington State Archives

April 2 is International Children’s Book Day, a celebration of the role that such books play in the lives of children and their development into adults. Some children’s books take readers to imaginary lands and on unusual adventures. Others may describe places and events that are familiar. Some children’s books address readers’ curiosity about life in other countries or in distant times. Biographies for children portray the lives and accomplishments of notable people. Some works, particularly those aimed at older children and adolescents, deal with the difficult situations often faced by individuals and society.

This International Children’s Book Day, World Book remembers the beloved American author Beverly Cleary, who died last week at the age of 104. Cleary wrote more than 40 children’s books. Her books are noted for their humor and for their realistic and natural dialogue. Cleary is best known for her series of books about the adventures of two youngsters named Henry Huggins and Ramona Quimby. The two characters and their friends live in a middle-class suburb of Portland, Oregon. In 1975, Cleary received the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award (now called the Children’s Literature Legacy Award) for her lifelong contributions to children’s literature.

Cleary has been praised as one of the first American authors to include children of divorced or single-parent families in her books. She won the 1984 Newbery Medal for Dear Mr. Henshaw (1983), a novel about a sixth-grade boy named Leigh Botts. The boy’s parents are divorced and he is attending a new school—situations that confront many of Cleary’s readers. In a series of letters Leigh writes to Mr. Henshaw, his favorite author, the reader learns of Leigh’s loneliness. One year older and much happier, Leigh appears in Cleary’s sequel, Strider (1991).

Beverly Atlee Bunn was born on April 12, 1916, in McMinnville, Oregon. She married Clarence T. Cleary in 1940. She began her adult career as a librarian. Cleary’s books reflected her desire to write about the kinds of rascals she met during read-aloud sessions in her library. One of her major complaints growing up was that she could not find funny books that featured kids like her. To solve the problem, Cleary wrote her first children’s book, Henry Huggins (1950). Ramona first appeared as a major character in Beezus and Ramona (1955). Cleary’s fantasy series about Ralph Mouse was inspired by her son’s love of motorcycles. The series began with The Mouse and the Motorcycle (1965).

Cleary wrote two autobiographies, A Girl from Yamhill (1988) and My Own Two Feet (1995), as well as the autobiographical children’s novel Emily’s Runaway Imagination (1961). She died on March 25, 2021.

 

 

Tags: beverly cleary, children's literature, international children's book day, ramona quimby, the mouse and the motorcycle
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April is National Poetry Month

Thursday, April 1st, 2021
Credit: © metamorworks, Shutterstock

Credit: © metamorworks, Shutterstock

April 1 marks the first day of National Poetry Month in the United States, a celebration of this unique form of literature. Each week, Behind the Headlines will feature the art of poetry or a famous poet.

Throughout history, poetry has been used for many purposes. People have used poetry in religious rituals, to praise and celebrate remarkable individuals, and to express intense emotions, from love to rage. Various social groups have also used poetry to record events and stories. Such poems include lessons that are important for the group to remember and pass down from generation to generation.

The basic feature of poetic language is rhythm. Rhythm is the repetition of sounds in a particular pattern. All human beings enjoy rhythm. Children may clap their hands or rock their bodies to match the rhythm of nursery rhymes, with the rhythm helping the words stick in their memory. Adults may detect more subtle patterns in poems and find that such patterns deepen their response to the meanings and emotions conveyed by the words.

Poetry began in prehistoric times, as an oral (spoken) tradition. After the development of writing, poetry gradually became an important written art. In all languages throughout history, human beings have created poems, remembered them, recited them, and found deep meaning in them. There are times in life when every human being wants to say exactly the right thing in exactly the right words. That is what poets try to do. For people who do not write poetry, it can be a moving discovery to find a poem that expresses feelings or experiences for which they cannot find the words.

Poetry has come to seem strange to many people. Yet, we still discover poetry in many places in our world. Popular songs feature such poetic innovations as regular meter and rhyme. Nursery rhymes and children’s verse remain popular. At important events in life—a wedding or a funeral, for example—people may recite poetry to express their feelings and to mark the significance of the event.

People still turn to poetry to express romantic feelings, whether reciting well-known poems or writing their own. Poems remain not only among the most enjoyable uses of language but the most precise and significant as well. In some cultures, poetry remains highly valued, and many people have memorized numbers of poems.

Not every poem is well-written or memorable. But among the countless poems that have been written throughout the ages, every individual will find at least some that strike a deep and resonant chord.

Tags: april, literature, national poetry month, poetry, rhythm
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Vroom into Easter with Peepmobiles

Tuesday, March 30th, 2021
A toothsome tray of traditional Peepmobiles credit: WORLD BOOK photo

A toothsome tray of traditional Peepmobiles
Credit: WORLD BOOK photo

For many people, Easter is a time of spiritual reflection. In addition, Easter celebrates the end of winter in some parts of the world and the promise of spring. The holiday also brings fun, in the form of candy and crafts. These two collide in one of our favorite traditions, the Peepmobile!

Think of the Peepmobile as a fast and furious twist on the gingerbread house. A Peepmobile is a sugary sports car driven by a steely-eyed marshmallow bunny (marketed under the trade name Peeps). You can try making a Peepmobile yourself—it’s a fun and creative way to use up any extra Easter treats.

A traditional Peepmobile is made with a snack cake chassis. With the help of an adult, cut or hollow out a small space to accommodate the marshmallow bunny. Miniature cookies make good tires, and a miniature pretzel is perfect for the steering wheel. A dab of frosting can help to hold the whole thing together.

"The Fast and the Fluffy" by Jeff De La Rosa credit: WORLD BOOK photo

“The Fast and the Fluffy” by Jeff De La Rosa
Credit: WORLD BOOK photo

Most years, we at World Book take a break from our duties to share a tray of Peepmobiles in fun and fellowship. But this year, with social distancing measures in place to prevent the spread of COVID-19, our Peepmobile rally looked a little different.

"Candy Paint (feat. Dua Peepa and Ariana Grandeliciosa)" by Madeline King credit: WORLD BOOK photo

“Candy Paint (feat. Dua Peepa and Ariana Grandelicious)” by Madeline King
Credit: WORLD BOOK photo

We couldn’t share treats in person, so we turned the event into a do-it-yourself celebration of custom car culture—a contest we called Peep My Ride. Each of the participants created a custom racer. The only rule was that all the parts had to be edible. Then, we gathered online to share photos of our tricked-out treats and vote on the winner.

"Be-Peep-Pared" by Will Adams credit: WORLD BOOK photo

“Be Peep-Pared” by Will Adams
Credit: WORLD BOOK photo

The creativity exceeded all expectations. There was an elegant Peeps-drawn carriage, a Girl Scout cookie-powered roadster, and even an appearance by Dua Peepa and Ariana Grandelicious. In the end, only one winner could be crowned, and that prize went to the tart-looking Sour Striker.

"Peep-Drawn Carriage" by Echo González credit: WORLD BOOK photo

“Peep-Drawn Carriage” by Echo González
Credit: WORLD BOOK photo

We hope you will try your hand at this fun holiday tradition, and share your results with friends and loved ones, whether in person or in pictures. Most of all, we hope you have a happy Easter!

"Sour Striker" by Lauren Kelliher credit: WORLD BOOK photo

“Sour Striker” by Lauren Kelliher
Credit: WORLD BOOK photo

Tags: crafts, easter, marshmallows, peepmobiles, snack cakes, treats
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Women’s History Month: Nadeen Ashraf

Monday, March 22nd, 2021
Nadeen Ashraf.  Credit: © Omar Allam, American University in Cairo

Nadeen Ashraf
Credit: © Omar Allam, American University in Cairo

March is Women’s History Month, an annual observance of women’s achievements and contributions to society. This month, Behind the Headlines will feature woman pioneers in a variety of areas. 

Social media websites are often used for such activities as connecting with friends and family or sharing your singing, dancing, or cooking skills. But social media can also serve as platforms for promoting change, be it in politics, race relations, or gender equality. Nadeen Ashraf, an Egyptian feminist and activist against sexual assault, started the account Assault Police on the social media service Instagram. The account has drawn large numbers of women to share information about sexual assault and harassment, along with their personal experiences.

Ashraf was born March 12, 1998, in Cairo. From a young age, she had an interest in the internet and social media. She started Assault Police while studying philosophy at the American University in Cairo. Other students had posted online about a man who was sexually harassing and threatening women. When one of their accounts suddenly disappeared, Ashraf became angry. In July 2020, she created Assault Police to repost the allegations. The account quickly drew thousands of followers, and the man was soon arrested.

Many more women were drawn to share their experiences on Assault Police. Ashraf’s work helped inspire a broader discussion about sexual violence in the conservative country. Egyptian officials have traditionally been reluctant to prosecute crimes against women, and witnesses and victims may be charged with indecency upon coming forward. In a poll conducted by the United Nations in 2013, 99 percent of Egyptian women reported witnessing sexual assault or harassment. A 2017 study found Cairo to be the most dangerous large city for women, in part due to sexual assault and harassment.

The movement sparked in part by Ashraf has been compared to the MeToo social movement in Western countries. In August 2020, Egypt’s parliament passed a law to shield the identity of harassment victims.

Tags: assault police, egypt, nadeen ashraf, sexual assault, sexually harassment, social media
Posted in Crime, Current Events, Government & Politics, Holidays/Celebrations, People, Women | Comments Off

Happy St. Patrick’s Day!

Wednesday, March 17th, 2021
Saint Patrick. Credit: © Shutterstock

Saint Patrick. Credit: © Shutterstock

March 17 is St. Patrick’s Day, the feast day of the patron saint of Ireland. A patron saint is a saint chosen to protect the interests of a country, place, group, trade or profession, or activity.

Saint Patrick was a missionary to Ireland in the A.D. 400′s. He converted the Irish to Christianity. St. Patrick’s Day is a national holiday in Ireland. It also is celebrated outside of Ireland in cities with many people of Irish descent.

In Ireland, St. Patrick’s Day is primarily a religious holiday. People honor Saint Patrick by attending special religious services. They also enjoy family and community gatherings. They celebrate by wearing shamrocks. According to legend, Saint Patrick used a shamrock to explain the idea of the Trinity to the Irish.

In the United States, St. Patrick’s Day is primarily a secular (nonreligious) holiday. Many people wear green clothing. They also hold parties and march in parades. The first St. Patrick’s Day celebration in what is now the United States was held in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1737. Today, more than 100 U.S. cities hold parades. The St. Patrick’s Day parade in New York City, is the largest.

St. Patrick’s Day is often associated with the color green. The Chicago River is dyed bright green every year. A common St. Patrick’s Day dish is corned beef and cabbage. And, while the cabbage might lose its vibrant color during cooking, it celebrates the many plants that turn green this time of year.

Like so many holidays this year, St. Patrick’s Day might look different than in years past. In many places, efforts are being made to prevent the spread of the pandemic (global outbreak) of the coronavirus disease COVID-19. Such efforts often include social distancing, meant to limit contact among people and thus the spread of germs. But, limiting the spread of germs doesn’t mean you can’t have a joyous St. Patrick’s Day!

One way to celebrate is to have a virtual cooking class with friends and family. You can make traditional Irish soda bread, a delicious baked good filled with such sweets as raisins or currants. While you wait for your bread to bake, try Irish dancing. (If you live in an apartment, apologize to your downstairs neighbors by leaving them some slices of soda bread!) No matter how you choose to celebrate, we hope you have a safe and fun St. Patrick’s Day!

Tags: chicago river, ireland, irish heritage, saint patrick, shamrock, st. patrick's day
Posted in Current Events, Food, History, Holidays/Celebrations, Religion | Comments Off

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