Showing posts with label Unification Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unification Day. Show all posts

May 14 - Integration Day in Liberia

Posted on May 14, 2020


Today's Liberian holiday is also commonly called Unification Day, or Unification and Integration Day.

The word "integration" in the holiday name might make you wonder if this day celebrates racial integration. Liberia is an African nation, and South Africa once had horrible, strict, severe racial segregation called apartheid. 

However, the integration celebrated today in Liberia wasn't black people and white people or any other racial integration. It was bringing together black people who had come from the United States - formerly enslaved people, many of them - and black people who had never been enslaved and for the most part never been out of Africa. 


The unique history of Liberia was set up by the American Colonization Society, in the 1800s; this organization funded the shipping of more than 15,000 freed and free-born black people people from the U.S. and more than 3,000 Afro-Caribbeans to one region on the western coast of Africa. Those black people of course took their culture with them, and many aspects of that culture looked a lot like life in the pre-Civil-War-American South!

Because they had faced so much discrimination and disempowerment, in the U.S., it is perhaps natural that these colonists eagerly took leadership roles in the new colony - and eventually in the new, independent nation. It is sad that they didn't worry enough about NOT trammeling on the rights and culture of the indigenous people they lived alongside. 

There was a terrible parallel between the black Americo-Liberians' treatment of indigenous Liberians and the white Americans' treatment of Native Americans.

As a matter of fact, people living on their own land, the land of their ancestors, were denied citizenship in the nation! (See what I mean about terrible? And parallel to treatment of indigenous Americans?)

It wasn't until the middle of the 1900s that President William Tubman began efforts to reduce the tension between Americo-Liberians (like himself) and indigenous Liberians.

Today is Unification and Integration Day because it is the anniversary of President Tubman's inaugural speech in which he first announced the National Unification Policy.

Like all nations, Liberia has some lovely places to enjoy:






January 24 - Unification Day in Romania

Posted on January 24, 2020



On this date in 1866, Romania officially became Romania!

The "unification" was two principalities, Moldavia and Wallachia, joining together to form Romania. 

Even though the event Unification Day celebrates happened more than a century ago, the holiday is pretty new, having started in 2015. 

Romania's "National Day" is called Great Union Day - it's December 1 each year - and it is when Romania got a bit larger as Transylvania, Bessarabia, and Bukovina united with Moldavia and Wallachia under the Romanian banner.


Bessarabia

Bukovina

Moldavia

Transylvania

Wallachia



Also on this date:













National Big Wig Day


(Last Friday in January)








September 6, 2012 - Unification Day in Bulgaria


The people of Bulgaria were bummed with the Treaty of Berlin (1878), because it assigned land Bulgarians considered part of their nation to other countries. Some Bulgarians began to explore peaceful ways of getting their land back.

One swath of land was called Northern Thrace, but the Treaty of Berlin gave it a new, artificial name: Eastern Rumelia. Most people living there wanted to be part of Bulgaria. And that is a huge reason why Bulgaria was able to take back Eastern Rumelia in a bloodless revolution on this date in 1885. Bulgaria and the former Eastern Rumelia declared their unification!

Gosh, I love a bloodless revolution! Peace instead of war, diplomacy instead of death.

But...most European nations didn't recognize the unified Bulgaria. In November of the same year, diplomacy failed and war broke out. A neighboring country, Serbia, attacked Bulgaria on some pretext, and a 14-day war was fought by soldiers of the two nations. Bulgaria won, and as the result of this short war, all the other nations of Europe accepted Bulgaria's unification.

Learn about Bulgaria...

In the 2011 World Championships for Rhythmic Gymnastics, the Bulgarian team won a gold medal. I hoped they would do well during this year's Olympics, but they didn't medal at all in this artistic sport.








Glimpse a small sample of the beauties of Bulgaria.

To learn more about Bulgaria, check out this earlier post

Also on this date: