Saturday, May 29, 2010

THE KOREAN WAR (FORGOTTEN WAR)

Japan colonized the Korean peninsula in 1910, but after the end of World War II in 1945, the peninsula was split in half with the Soviet Union in control of the northern half and the United States in control of the southern half. The new South Korean president, Syngman Rhee, was intent upon reuniting the entire peninsula by force if necessary. This idea was distasteful to the Americans so Rhee’s army was not allowed to have the weaponry that would have made it possible for them to fulfill this promise.

Fighting along the border continued until June 25, 1950 when North Korea invaded South Korea. The United Nations declared North Korea as an aggressor and troops were mobilized and sent to fight on the South’s side. The allies managed to push the North Koreans all the way to the border with China; this provoked a response from China which pushed the allies all the way past Seoul, South Korea. In turn, the allies regained ground and fighting remained in the vicinity of the 38th parallel. The allies gained the upper hand with superior air power and a naval blockade of the North; this lead to a stalemate.

From 1951 to 1953, both sides agreed to retreat behind border lines and to cease fire. This is how it has been until March 26 of this year when North Korea torpedoed a South Korean ship which killed 46. This is not the only act of aggression from the North against the South; in 1987, for example, the North shot an airplane down which killed 115 people. There are several examples of this type of aggression over the years and the South Koreans have had enough. The sinking of the warship, Cheonan, may be a violation of the truce; it will be decided by the U.N. Armistice Commission. In the meantime discussions will continue between the United States and China over this matter. It remains to be seen how this will end.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

THE MEXICAN-AMERICAN WAR

Texas territory used to be Mexico in the 1820s and 1830s. It was a relatively unpopulated area which Mexico wanted help settling. In came American settlers who were more than willing to take Mexico up on their offer. All they would have to do is pledge their allegiance to Mexico and convert to Catholicism. This was not too high a price to pay so many Americans moved to Texas. Difficulties began when the settlers became increasingly dissatisfied with Mexican rule. Because people in America had begun to believe that it was their manifest destiny to settle the land from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, the Texans had the support of the American government against the Mexican government.

This became important in 1835 when the unhappy Texans took up arms against the Mexican government which signed a treaty to end the hostilities in 1836. This did not work because some Mexicans were unhappy with the treaty and kept the fighting going with battles along the border against the newly independent Texans. The Texans decided that becoming a state in the American union would be a good idea and since the United States were eager to support this idea, Congress officially approved the annexation of Texas into the union on July 4, 1845. This did not please Mexico which believed that its territory contained land farther north than the Texans believed was the border so border fighting continued. After the annexation the Mexican-American war began in 1846.

It was a tough war with the Mexican army fighting their hardest to stave off the American soldiers, but the Americans were too hard a foe to defeat. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo on February 2, 1848 was signed ending the two-year conflict. The United States received exactly what it wanted in this deal, land from Ocean to Ocean. In exchange for $15 million the United States took possession of the territory that is now California, Utah, New Mexico, Nevada and Arizona. This land was won in the Mexican-American War and Mexico was compensated for the loss of this land, so if you hear that California and other states really still belong to Mexico, you might want to point the person who says this to a history book.

Friday, May 21, 2010

The War of 1812

A war that is not discussed very often that the new country of the United States was involved in is called the War of 1812. The new Americans had many irritations to deal with which preceded the beginning of this war and some of them started in Europe between France and Britain. France and Britain were making it difficult for each other to trade their goods in Europe. France, which had supremacy over the continent of Europe prevented British goods from being sold there. In their turn, Britain, which was dominant over the seas, sought to blockade Europe.

To get around the French, the British declared that neutral ships should go through Britain before going to Europe to sell their goods. The French, who were unhappy with this act, denounced all neutral ships which went along with the British embargo. The United States felt aggrieved by the actions of both France and Britain, but it was more upset with Britain. On top of dominating the seas, Britain was also removing British sailors from American ships and also would kidnap American sailors. The United States was not happy with any of these actions.

To combat the actions of the British, the Embargo Act was enacted and American ships were forbidden to engage in foreign trade. This did not force France and Britain to open up trade to them, but severely weakened New England’s shipping industry. The next answer, to some people, was to declare war and invade Canada. The war was so unpopular in New England that in 1814 they considered seceding from the union.

The war was fought along the Canadian border, Washington D.C. and New Orleans, with some gains won by Britain and some won by the U.S., but the war ended with the signing of the Treaty of Ghent. The differences between Britain and the United States were not resolved with this treaty, but it did end the fighting.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

WHAT IS MEMORIAL DAY ABOUT? THE LAST LIVING WORLD WAR I VETERAN

We have been introduced to Frank Buckles, the last surviving American veteran of World War I. This is the type of person that we are honoring on Memorial Day. He currently lives in West Virginia.

One interesting thing about this veteran is that he is currently active in memorializing World War I veterans and something is coming up in the future with reference to this veteran. For the past three years Buckles has been recounting his story to a filmmaker who is in the process of making a film about Buckles. Not only will World War I veterans be honored with Memorial Day, but a film coming directly from the memory of someone who lived it will be released for public consumption.

Buckles joined the army in 1917 when he was 16 years old; the war had already been going on for three years. During his two years of service in England and France Buckles was an ambulance driver and also transported prisoners of war after the war ended. But it doesn’t matter what veterans did during the war, they had important roles to play during the war and deserve to be honored during Memorial Day.

Buckles was not in a combat situation during the first world war and was discharged in 1919, but he had a much harder time during World War II when he was not even a soldier. During this time he was taken as a prisoner by the Japanese when he was working in the Philippines and spent 3 ½ years in a prison camp beginning in 1942. This experience, even though he was not a soldier at the time also qualifies him to be honored on Memorial Day.

Buckles has been honored with awards several times for his service during World War I. First he received both the Victory Medal and the Army of Occupation of Germany Medal from the United States. The country of France also awarded him their Legion d’honneur. Much later, in 2008, he was awarded with the Veterans of Foreign Wars’ Gold Medal of Merit. All these medals were well deserved, but the yearly honor of Memorial Day will never be too much for these veterans.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

WHAT IS MEMORIAL DAY ABOUT?

Memorial Day is always the last Monday of the month of May; this year it will be May 31. You may have an opportunity to go to a picnic or some other type of celebration and have a nice day off, but it is also an occasion to remember what this holiday is about. The holiday of Memorial Day was to honor all the veterans past and present of the wars of the United States; there have been several.

This country needs a holiday like Memorial Day because there have been so many wars throughout its history. This country began with a war, the Revolutionary War. This war was fought to become independent from the British Empire. When the war was won a new country was born. Not long after that it was necessary to fight the war of 1812 also against the British; once this war was ended it was definite at that point that the United States would remain independent from the United Kingdom.

After the War of 1812, the British were no longer a problem for the Americans. They could turn their attention to other areas of the land. The Southwest was where the Mexican-American War was fought which brought a large part of the Southwest into the United States. Then in the 1860s the Civil War was fought between the northern states and the southern states; the result of this war was that the union was not broken up and slavery was abolished.

The Spanish-American War was fought at the end of the 19th century and this is when the United States gained control of several islands in the Caribbean and the Pacific. World War I, the first war of the 20th century, was fought in Europe. Most of the veterans of these wars are obviously no longer living. The only verified American veteran of World War I, Frank Woodruff Buckles, is 109.

The veterans of these wars are the people that we are to honor on Memorial Day. When you are enjoying your holiday, be sure to take the time out to think of the people who fought in these wars because they sacrificed so much for the country. There will be Memorial Day sales and it is okay to partake in them as long as you take time out to remember the veterans.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

FLOWERS ARE HERE TO STAY

With Mother’s Day there are flowers. There are several different online flower services that are advertising specifically for Mother’s Day because it is a given that you will be giving your mother flowers tomorrow. It makes sense because women like flowers; it doesn’t matter why you are giving them they are always appreciated. And having flowers delivered to her work where everyone can see is a great way for her to show off the fact that someone loves her. Even if you are sending them to her home they will be displayed and enjoyed for as long as they last.

Over our examination of the history of this day we have learned that the ancients were no different than we modern humans in giving flowers to mothers. Even in the 1600s mothers were being given flowers for England’s Mothering Day. It would be tough to fight the flower invasion that is associated with Mother’s Day, but surprisingly, someone was unhappy with the association of flowers and Mother’s Day and fought to separate the two.

The woman who managed to have Mother’s Day declared a nationally observed holiday, Anna M. Jarvis, despised the commercialization that the florists appeared to be adding to the holiday. She fought against this in many ways including successfully having the words “Mother’s Day” removed from a stamp which featured her mother with a vase of white carnations.

It is not just the fact that women like flowers that makes it logical for mothers to receive them on any occasion; carnations have been associated with this holiday and Anna M. Jarvis is the one who added them to the mix. On Jarvis’ first celebration of mothers in 1908, she arranged to have her mother’s favorite flowers, white carnations, to be given to all the mothers who attended the event. In the present day white carnations honor a deceased mother and red or pink honor a living one. Needless to say, flowers are here to stay.

Monday, May 3, 2010

ANCIENT CELEBRATIONS OF MOTHER’S DAY

Honoring mothers has such a long history that it is not surprising that it is practiced in several countries throughout the world. As we have learned from an earlier post, Mother’s Day was celebrated as a feast for the Egyptian goddess, Isis. The Romans had their own goddess, Cybele, also known as the Great Mother to glorify. The Greeks were known to celebrate mothers by way of their mother of the gods, known as Rhea.

Europe was not to be left out of the celebrations. In the beginning, Mother’s Day was about the Mother Church and early Christians took the opportunity to honor their church by offering jewels and flowers much like what happens on modern Mother’s Day. The day was celebrated during the season of Lent on the fourth Sunday and honored mothers through honoring the church.

But the English added all mothers to the honor in the 1600s and the new name that was given to it was Mothering Day. It became a day off for the workers of England when all families would have a chance to get together and feast, giving them one day of break from the fasting of Lent. It was known as mother’s holiday and children would bring gifts to their mothers on this day in the form of flowers.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Mother’s Day For The Moon Goddess

Julia Ward Howe and Anna Marie Jarvis Reeves are responsible for the current version of Mother’s Day that is being observed in our country today, but honoring mothers has an even longer history than Howe and Reeves. In ancient times, the people in Egypt used to honor mothers by way of the goddesses they worshipped. The goddess Isis, the goddess of rebirth, was one of the first to be honored for her mothering.


The goddess, Isis, gave birth to a son, Horus, the god of the sun. There are many depictions of the mother, Isis, with her son, Horus, meant to show her as a loving mother doting on her son. Because of her reputation, the goddess, Isis, was called the mother of the pharaohs because her son became a pharaoh in Egyptian belief. For this honor, the goddess Isis was celebrated with a feast each year and was the ancient equivalent of our modern day Mother’s Day celebrations.

These days people do not ordinarily arrange for feasts to celebrate their mothers. It is common, though, to take mothers to restaurants on Mother’s Day. That is a nice thing to do for your mother, but she may also enjoy a keepsake from you for her to remember the Mother’s Day that you lovingly took the time to make her feel special this Mother’s Day. You can accomplish by taking a trip to Dyani’s Creations to find a perfect gift for your unique mom.

Contact us at dyaniecholee at live.com.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Mother’s Day Becomes A National Holiday

Another mother had similar ideas to Julia Ward Howe, one of the founders of Mother’s Day. Ann Marie Reeves Jarvis believed in uniting mothers to help combat the ills of the city she lived in. For the purpose of improving the health condition of children by improving sanitation, Reeves Jarvis invented the Mothers Day Work Clubs for the churches. They were able to make a huge difference from their efforts.


Also like Julia Ward Howe, Reeves Jarvis was concerned about all mothers’ sons who fought during the Civil War. At that time she instructed the women who volunteered in her Mothers Day Work Clubs to disregard whether a wounded soldier was a member of the union army or confederate army and treat everyone the same.

After the war was over Reeves Jarvis continued her efforts to bring people of different persuasions together as Ward Howe did by organizing Mother’s Friendship Day. This day did not become the national holiday that she would have liked, so her daughter, Anna M. Jarvis, continued the fight. Reeves Jarvis died May 9, 1905 and after her mother’s death, Anna M. Jarvis was determined to make her mother’s dream come true.

Between 1907 and 1911 more and more states signed onto the idea of celebrating mothers on a national Mother’s Day. It became official in 1914 when President Woodrow Wilson made every second Sunday of May as the national holiday honoring mothers everywhere. This year, Mother’s Day falls on the 105th anniversary of Anne Marie Reeves Jarvis’ death.

The history of Mother’s Day may have motivated you to do something special for your own mother this coming Mother’s Day. Taking time out to honor mothers was meant by Julia Ward Howe and Ann Marie Reeves Jarvis to be the point of Mother’s Day. The online store, Dyani’s Creations will give you the chance to do this by finding something for your mother that she will really love. It is also easy!

Contact us at dyaniecholee at live.com

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

The First Mother's Days

Mother’s Day has a long history in the world, but in the history of the United States, a writer named Julia Ward Howe is responsible for bringing Mother’s Day here. Julia Ward Howe wrote books of poetry, travel, autobiographies and plays. She contributed to women’s issues in the form of articles, but what made her truly famous were the words she wrote for the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” during the Civil War. As an abolitionist the Civil War was an important part of her and her husband’s lives.


Married to a man who believed that it was his duty to be in control of everything, Julia was dissatisfied with her married life. She was not the type to be happy with taking care of her home and family without being able to contribute to the literary world in a profound way. After her separation she became highly active in the women’s liberation movement.

Because of the atrocities of the Civil War that she lived through, Julia was looking forward to a peaceful world and proposed that mothers be the ones to make this idea a reality. In her Mother’s Day Proclamation of 1870, she advised the mother’s of the world to reject the idea of sending their sons to war to kill other mothers’ sons and resolve differences with others peacefully without weapons. Her idea of Mother’s Day was to be an international one, including mothers of all persuasions all over the world.

The first day set for Julia’s mother’s celebration was June 2, 1873. As long as Julia was in charge of the celebrations, they continued on. At the point where she stopped paying for them, the celebrations also stopped. Only Julia’s hometown, Boston, continued to honor the holiday after she was unable to contribute to the monetary needs of other celebrations.

How do you plan to honor your mother this Mother’s Day? One great way would be to choose a beautiful gift from Dyani’s Creations

Let us know what you think.  Visit us at dyaniecholee at live.com.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

MOTHER’S DAY GIFTS MADE EASILY

Mother’s Day is coming up. For some people this can be a terrifying prospect because you have no idea what to buy for your mom. What if she doesn’t like it? There is a way that you cannot lose in gift giving on Mother’s Day.

You must remember bringing home your own masterpieces that you made at school. Your mother was always so proud of these things, wasn’t she? She would display them on the refrigerator. You can encourage this pride to rise up in your mother again.

If you’re not an artist and it doesn’t appeal to you to get your hands dirty in finger paints, don’t worry. There are beautiful pictures out there that you can use to decorate the gift you want to give. You can personalize your gift with special words or your name that will make the gift even more special. It is not necessary to be a poet or the greatest storyteller in the world. Your mother will love anything you create because it came from you.

For those of you who do not like to spend time in shopping malls, this is also an alternative for you. Creating your gifts online can keep you out of the malls the day before Mother’s Day frantically searching for a gift. Driving through a crowded parking lot to find a space and rummaging through a crowded mall full of other people who are also looking for a Mother’s Day gift, can be a thing of the past.

To find the perfect gift for your mother online that you can personalize visit Dyani’s Creations at http://www.zazzle.com/decholee*

We want to hear from you!  E-mail us at dyaniecholee at live.com.