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March 21: A Massacre Fuels Conflict, A Prison Closes, A March Begins

Today, March 21st

March 21: A Massacre Fuels Conflict, A Prison Closes, A March Begins

March 21 has witnessed three moments involving confinement, violence, and liberation—literal and metaphorical. Revolutionary War forces massacred sleeping men in a farmhouse, demonstrating that even wars for liberty involve brutal acts that betray stated principles. America's most feared prison closed after proving too expensive to maintain, ending an era when isolation on a rock seemed like appropriate punishment. And civil rights marchers set out on a journey that would help secure voting rights for millions, proving that sometimes the most powerful weapon is simply walking forward together. These events remind us that violence often escalates conflicts rather than resolving them, that institutions deemed permanent eventually outlive their usefulness, and that determined people walking toward justice can force nations to change.
March 21: A Massacre Fuels Conflict, A Prison Closes, A March Begins

20 March

March 20: A Novel Ignites, A Woman Wins, A War Begins

March 20: A Novel Ignites, A Woman Wins, A War Begins When words changed minds, a musher made history, and shock and awe launched a controversial war March 20 has witnessed three moments when barriers were crossed—moral, athletic, and military. A novel exposed slavery's horrors with such emotional power that it helped precipitate civil war, proving that storytelling could shift public opinion on the defining moral crisis of its era. A woman won a brutal endurance race through Alaskan wilderness that had been male-dominated since its inception, demonstrating that gender barriers in extreme sports existed only until someone refused to accept them. And the United States launched an invasion based on faulty intelligence that would consume lives, treasure, and credibility for years, showing how certainty about threats can lead to catastrophic miscalculation. Together, these events reveal how change arrives—through moral persuasion, through breaking precedent, and sometimes through decisions whose consequences prove far grimmer than anticipated. The Book That Started a War On March 20, 1852, Uncle Tom's Cabin was published as a two-volume book after first appearing as a serial in the abolitionist newspaper The National Era. Harriet Beecher Stowe, daughter of a prominent minister and sister to famous preachers, wrote the novel in response to the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, which required Northerners to return escaped slaves to bondage. Stowe crafted a melodramatic story centered on Tom, an enslaved man of extraordinary Christian faith, and Eliza, a mother who flees across ice floes to save her child from being sold. The novel depicted slavery not through abstract arguments but through characters readers could sympathize with, showing families torn apart, children sold, and human beings treated as property. The book became a phenomenon. It sold 300,000 copies in its first year in the U.S. and over a million in Britain. Stowe received fan mail and death threats. Southern writers produced pro-slavery response novels attempting to counter her portrayal. The book's influence was enormous—legend claims that when Abraham Lincoln met Stowe in 1862, he said, "So you're the little woman who wrote the book that started this great war." Whether apocryphal or not, the quote captures Uncle Tom's Cabin's impact. The novel made slavery personal for Northern readers who had never seen it firsthand, converting abstract moral questions into visceral emotional reactions. It demonstrated that art could be activism, that storytelling could change minds more effectively than political pamphlets, and that showing suffering mattered more than debating philosophy. Uncle Tom's Cabin helped make the Civil War inevitable by making compromise with slavery morally intolerable for millions of Northerners who had previously been indifferent or accommodating. Stowe proved that sometimes one voice, telling one story well, can shift the moral center of a nation.   A novel exposed slavery's brutality so vividly it helped push the nation toward war Through the Blizzard One hundred thirty-three years after Stowe's book was published, on March 20, 1985, Libby Riddles mushed her dog team into Nome, Alaska, becoming the first woman to win the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. The Iditarod, established in 1973, covers roughly 1,000 miles of brutal Alaskan wilderness between Anchorage and Nome, commemorating the 1925 serum run that saved Nome from a diphtheria epidemic. The race tests both mushers and dogs against sub-zero temperatures, blinding snow, treacherous ice, and exhaustion. Riddles, a 28-year-old from Wisconsin who had moved to Alaska and fallen in love with dog mushing, was not favored to win. But during the race, she made a gamble that would define her victory. A severe storm was approaching, and most mushers decided to wait it out. Riddles, trailing the leaders, saw opportunity in the blizzard. She pushed forward through whiteout conditions and brutal winds, making up significant time while competitors sheltered in place. Her decision was risky—she could have become disoriented, gotten lost, or endangered herself and her dogs—but her navigation skills and the strength of her dog team carried her through. When the storm cleared, Riddles had taken the lead, which she maintained to victory. Her win shattered the assumption that the Iditarod was too grueling for women, proving that strategic thinking and connection with one's dog team mattered as much as physical strength. Riddles opened doors for female mushers who followed; Susan Butcher would win four times in the next decade. Riddles demonstrated that barriers labeled "too difficult" often mean "no woman has done it yet," and that sometimes the boldest decision is to keep moving when everyone else stops. Through Alaskan blizzards, Riddles proved that barriers exist only until someone refuses to accept them ❦ Shock and Awe On March 20, 2003, eighteen years after Riddles's Iditarod victory, the United States launched Operation Iraqi Freedom with massive airstrikes on Baghdad in a campaign called "shock and awe." President George W. Bush and his administration argued that Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction and posed an imminent threat to U.S. security. The invasion bypassed United Nations authorization after France, Germany, and other allies refused support. A "coalition of the willing"—primarily the U.S. and United Kingdom—invaded anyway. American forces quickly toppled Saddam's government; Bush declared "Mission Accomplished" from an aircraft carrier on May 1. The mission, it turned out, had barely begun. No weapons of mass destruction were found. The assumptions underlying invasion—that Iraqis would welcome Americans as liberators, that a stable democracy would quickly emerge, that the war would pay for itself through oil revenues—proved catastrophically wrong. Instead, Iraq descended into sectarian violence, insurgency, and civil war. Over 4,500 American service members died, along with hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. The war cost trillions of dollars, destabilized the region, and contributed to the rise of ISIS. The faulty intelligence and flawed reasoning that led to invasion damaged American credibility internationally and domestically. The Iraq War demonstrated that military power without accurate intelligence and realistic planning produces disasters, that certainty about threats doesn't make those threats real, and that wars of choice based on faulty premises can consume lives and treasure with no corresponding benefit. While Stowe's novel helped start a war to end slavery—a cause that, however costly, achieved a moral good—the Iraq War began with noble rhetoric but produced primarily suffering, instability, and lessons learned too late. March 20, 2003, marked the beginning of America's longest continuous combat operation and one of its greatest foreign policy mistakes.   Baghdad on the eve of invasion—a war launched on faulty intelligence with catastrophic consequences

20 March

March 20: The New Day That Cannot Be Stopped

March 20: The New Day That Cannot Be Stopped Today is the vernal equinox — the first day of spring — and also Nowruz, the Persian New Year, one of the oldest continuously observed celebrations in human history. The sun, indifferent to the wars and regimes below, arrives on schedule. Today, at the precise astronomical moment when the sun crosses the celestial equator and day and night achieve their perfect equilibrium, two calendars converge. The vernal equinox marks the first day of spring in the Northern Hemisphere — an event that ancient civilizations from England to Mexico encoded into stone monuments, aligning pyramids and pillars to catch this specific light on this specific day. And for more than 300 million people across Iran, Central Asia, the Caucasus, and the global Persian diaspora, today is Nowruz: the "New Day," the Persian New Year, a celebration that has arrived without interruption for at least 3,000 years. In Tehran this morning, the hyacinths are still in bloom at the bazaar. The Haft-Sin tables are still set. Spring has come again — as it always does. A Celebration That Has Outlasted Every Empire Nowruz — from the Persian for "New Day" — is anchored not to a fixed date but to an astronomical event: the exact moment the sun enters Aries and the earth's axis tilts neither toward nor away from the light. The celebration's roots lie in Zoroastrianism, among the world's oldest living religions, where the spring equinox represented the triumph of light over darkness in the cosmic struggle at the heart of its theology. For millennia, human beings have built monuments to honor this moment. The Maya carved the Pyramid of Kukulcán at Chichen Itza so precisely that on each equinox, the afternoon sun casts a shadow that appears to send a great serpent slithering down its stairs. Stonehenge, constructed around 3000 BCE on England's Salisbury Plain, is oriented to align with the equinox sunrise. The ancient Egyptians built the Great Sphinx to face the rising sun on the vernal equinox. Across every civilization, on every continent, the turning of the light in March has been recognized as one of the most significant moments in the human year. Nowruz has survived Arab conquest, Mongol invasion, Soviet prohibition in Central Asia, and decades of ambivalence from Iran's Islamic Republic, which viewed its pre-Islamic roots with unease but ultimately could not suppress a tradition woven into the identity of an entire people. This year, it arrives under the shadow of an active war. "I have no energy to set my haft-sin and prepare my home for the spring," one 36-year-old Tehran resident told CNN. And yet, the bazaars are open. The hyacinths are selling. Families are gathering. A Kurdish family from Iran's West Azerbaijan province walked part of the way to Iraqi Kurdistan on foot through the mountains — borders closed, roads uncertain — because, as one of them explained, they were "determined" to celebrate. An Iranian American in Los Angeles, candle lit at a memorial for those killed in January's crackdown, then walked across the patio and jumped over a small fire burning in a tin pan to mark the New Year. The tradition endures.   The Haft-Sin table — seven items whose names begin with "S" in Persian, each symbolizing renewal, prosperity, and the promise of the year to come — has been set on Nowruz for thousands of years. At the exact moment of today's equinox, as it has been for over three millennia, Persian families around the world open a book of poetry — Hafiz is the tradition — and read aloud whatever verse they land on, treating it as a fortune for the year ahead. They eat sweets. They light candles. They watch the clock. In Caracas, Venezuela, a nation still celebrating its World Baseball Classic championship, it is spring. In Miami, where the championship was won, it is spring. In the dark streets of Havana, where candles burn in windows, it is spring. In Tehran, where the smoke of war mingles with the scent of hyacinths, it is spring. The equinox does not wait. The New Day arrives. It has always arrived. Today it arrives again.

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