World Family Photo Box Day
A day for printed pictures, old phones, albums, names written on backs, and the people a household remembers together.
United States Edition
World Family Photo Box Day leads today's complete edition for United States.
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 printed pictures, old phones, albums, names written on backs, and the people a household remembers together.
Families visit cemeteries with food, drink, and music, spending the day at the graveside of their loved ones. In Bolivia, you eat with the dead, you drink with the dead, and you tell stories about the dead until everyone is laughing. Grief here has room for joy.
Less elaborate than in Mexico, but still observed. Families gather, remember loved ones, and share food and stories. The cemeteries fill with flowers and the abuela tells stories about the family members you never met but feel like you know.
A day for herbs, flowers, seedlings, balcony pots, and every bit of green people manage to keep alive.
A day for the quick meal, the regular customer, the busy cook, and the food people rely on between obligations.
They are in Florida scrub. They are orange and black. They live in sand dunes. They are endangered.
You observe Malawi's iconic wildlife including African elephants, leopards, and hippopotamuses thriving in its national parks and Lake Malawi. You see that Malawian households typically keep dogs, goats, and chickens as their most common domestic animals. ACADA celebrates the world's pets, and helps assure better care.
You find that Kiribati's economy centers on copra and coconut oil exports rather than branded consumer goods, making coconut-based products and dried coconut meat the true signatures of these islands. You recognize that these humble exports represent survival and trade for a Pacific nation facing existential challenges from rising seas.
In Mexican-American communities, this is Dia de los Muertos, the Day of the Dead. Families build ofrendas (altars) with photographs, marigolds, favorite foods, and personal belongings of the deceased. They visit cemeteries, clean the graves, and spend the night telling stories about the people they have lost. The tradition is not morbid. It is the opposite: the dead are not gone. They are here, and they are hungry, and you made their favorite mole, so they will be pleased.