World Borrowed Tool Day
A day for the neighborly economy of ladders, pans, cords, books, advice, and returning things better than you found them.
Kuwait Edition
World Borrowed Tool Day leads today's complete edition for Kuwait.
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.
The Bengal Subah is the richest province of the Mughal Empire. The muslin of Dhaka is so fine that the British will call it woven wind. The rice paddies feed millions. The rivers are highways. The Portuguese, the Dutch, and the British are all trading in Hughli and the wealth is extraordinary.
The beginning of the month of preparation for the pearl diving season in the old Kuwaiti calendar. Before the dhows set sail, the divers would undergo a month of spiritual and physical purification: they fasted, they prayed, and they prepared their bodies for the ordeal of diving. The tawash (pearl merchant) would advance money to the divers' families, and the nokhatha (captain) would assemble his crew. The ritual of preparation was as important as the diving itself, and the month was marked by communal meals of harees and machboos, songs of the sea (nahham), and the gathering of the neighborhood to bid the divers farewell. The tradition is now commemorated in the heritage villages along the corniche.
A day for leaving early, finding the route, watching the platform, and giving everyone a little room.
A day for bakeries, kitchens, markets, ovens, and the aroma that can turn a street corner into a memory.
You observe the distinctive Niue Island reef heron and Pacific golden plover that inhabit this isolated South Pacific nation. You notice that Niueans primarily keep chickens, pigs, and dogs as practical domesticated animals. ACADA celebrates the world's pets, and helps assure better care.
You know Grenada's nutmeg and mace production, which supplies over one third of the world's nutmeg and has earned the island the nickname 'Isle of Spice' since colonial times. You understand that nutmeg is woven into Grenadian identity, economy, and cuisine, appearing on the national flag and remaining central to both local cooking and global spice markets.