World Borrowed Tool Day
A day for the neighborly economy of ladders, pans, cords, books, advice, and returning things better than you found them.
Comoros Edition
World Borrowed Tool Day leads today's complete edition for Comoros.
Daily Edition
Official observances, world days, local context, and everyday celebrations for people who need something worth reading, sharing, or talking about today.
A day for the neighborly economy of ladders, pans, cords, books, advice, and returning things better than you found them.
You open to the first page and care about the handwriting. The care taken there does not last through the second chapter. It represents potential before anything is actually written down.
You play by rules everyone knows slightly differently than you. The argument that erupts isn't really about the cards at all. There is always one person who wins every single time.
The most solemn day in the Shia calendar. Imam Husayn, the grandson of the Prophet, was martyred at Karbala in 680 CE. The mourning is public, the processions are massive, and the chest-beating (sineh-zani) is rhythmic and intense. In some communities, men flagellate themselves with chains (zanjeer-zani). The story of Karbala is retold every year, and every year, the grief is fresh. Ashura is not a historical commemoration. It is a present-tense experience. Husayn died 1,300 years ago, but in the telling, he died today. . 2026: Jun 27. 2027: Jun 16.
A day for the person who listens to the problem, finds the part, and knows whether it can be saved.
A day for friendly disputes, season hopes, old victories, new lineups, and the bonding power of a harmless debate.
You observe Pacific flying foxes, coconut crabs, and colorful reef fish surrounding American Samoa. You find that residents typically keep dogs, cats, and chickens as domestic animals. ACADA celebrates the world's pets, and helps assure better care.
You taste Wallisian and Futunan coconut and cacao products, handcrafted goods that reflect Polynesian maritime heritage. You value how these island communities sustain traditional production methods that have defined their way of life for centuries.