Showing posts with label Allies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allies. Show all posts

December 7 - Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day in the U.S.A.

 Posted on December 7, 2021


This is an update of my post published on December 7, 2010: 


December 7, 1941, a “date which will live in infamy,” Japanese fighter pilots launched a deadly surprise attack on Hawaii. About 2,400 U.S. service men and women were killed, and more than a thousand were injured, as the naval base at Pearl Harbor was bombed. Four battleships were sunk, and aircraft, cruisers, destroyers, a training ship, and a minelayer ship were either sunk or damaged.




The attack brought the U.S. into World War II, allies with England, France, and Russia and other nations in the world, fighting against Japan, Germany, and Italy.

The Remembrance Day is celebrated with observances and services, concerts and  dinners.

Some of these observances take place on the USS Arizona Memorial, which spans the sunken hull of the battleship on which 1,102 of the 1,177 sailors were killed.


The National Park Service maintains the memorial, and more than one million people visit every year. When I went to the memorial, years ago, a large group of Japanese tourists was there with flowers and paper cranes to honor the dead.





 
To find out more, check out...

EyeWitness to History  (lots of reading and a few photos)
or Tucson-dot-com  (lots of photos and a little reading)


Also on this date:


(First Tuesday of December)



October 24 - United Nations Day

  Posted on October 24, 2021


This is an update of my post published on October 24, 2010:



The United Nations had its beginnings in World War II. The Allied Nations were sometimes called the United Nations. The “Big Three” Allies were Great Britain, the United States, and the USSR (Russia). Other Allies included France (before it fell), China, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Ethiopia, Greece, India, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, the Philippine Commonwealth, Poland, the Union of South Africa, and Yugoslavia.

Representatives of the Allied countries began to plan an international organization            during the war, and in April of 1945, a conference was held to create the organization. The U.N. was formally established on this day in 1945.

                                                                      


The U.N. has a lot of success in the areas of human rights, economic development, health, and education. Its mission to prevent war hasn't been as successful, unfortunately. It is in an excellent position to lead in worldwide problems such as climate change—as long as member states such as the United States actually follow that lead and cooperate with one another!

Check out this video about what the UN is all about.



Did you know...?

For the past 60 Halloweens, some kids trick or treat for money for UNICEF (the U.N.'s children fund) rather than for candy.


 

Also on this date: