February 18
Holidays
11 holidays recorded on February 18 throughout history
Quote of the Day
“Lead the life that will make you kindly and friendly to everyone about you, and you will be surprised what a happy life you will lead.”
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International Asperger's Day falls on Hans Asperger's birthday, February 18.
International Asperger's Day falls on Hans Asperger's birthday, February 18. But here's the problem: Asperger collaborated with the Nazi regime. He sent dozens of disabled children to Am Spiegelgrund clinic, where they were killed. His 1944 paper described "autistic psychopathy" in children he deemed salvageable for the Reich. The diagnosis bearing his name was only removed from the DSM in 2013. Many autistic people now reject the term entirely. The day meant to honor difference carries the name of someone who decided which differences deserved to live.
Simeon of Jerusalem was Jesus's cousin — Mary's nephew, according to early church tradition.
Simeon of Jerusalem was Jesus's cousin — Mary's nephew, according to early church tradition. He led the Jerusalem church after James was executed in 62 CE. When Rome besieged Jerusalem in 70 CE, he led the entire Christian community out of the city to Pella, across the Jordan. They survived. The temple didn't. He was crucified under Trajan around 107 CE, reportedly at age 120. Western Christianity marks his feast today. He's the bridge figure nobody talks about — the family member who kept the movement alive when Jerusalem burned.
Colmán of Lindisfarne is commemorated on February 18.
Colmán of Lindisfarne is commemorated on February 18. He was an Irish monk who became bishop of Lindisfarne in 661. Three years later, he lost a theological argument about when to celebrate Easter. The Synod of Whitby chose the Roman calculation over the Celtic one. Colmán resigned immediately. He took the bones of Saint Aidan, half the monks, and thirty English boys who refused to stay without him. They sailed to Ireland and founded a new monastery. The English boys and Irish monks fought constantly over work duties, so Colmán built them separate monasteries. He spent his last years managing a dispute about chores that outlasted empires.
The Amami Islands celebrate their dialect today because they nearly lost it.
The Amami Islands celebrate their dialect today because they nearly lost it. After World War II, Japan banned the language in schools. Teachers punished children for speaking it. Within two generations, most young people couldn't understand their grandparents. The dialect isn't just different Japanese — it's a separate Ryukyuan language, closer to Okinawan than Tokyo Japanese. UNESCO lists it as endangered. Fewer than 10,000 native speakers remain, most over 60. The holiday started in 2007 as an act of linguistic self-defense. Schools now teach it twice a week. What was once forbidden is now protected, but protection came late.
The Gambia became independent on February 18, 1965, after 127 years of British rule.
The Gambia became independent on February 18, 1965, after 127 years of British rule. It's the smallest country in mainland Africa — a narrow strip of land following the Gambia River, entirely surrounded by Senegal except for the coast. Ten miles wide at most. Britain had kept it because of the river access, nothing else. The country stayed in the Commonwealth and kept Elizabeth II as head of state until 1970, when it became a republic. Dawda Jawara, who led independence, ruled for 29 years. The shape made no sense then. Still doesn't now.
Kurdish Students Union Day marks the founding of the Kurdistan Students Union in 1956.
Kurdish Students Union Day marks the founding of the Kurdistan Students Union in 1956. The organization started underground — Saddam Hussein's government banned Kurdish cultural groups. Students ran secret study sessions in Erbil and Sulaymaniyah, teaching Kurdish language and history that Iraqi schools had erased. They smuggled in textbooks printed in Syria. If caught, you went to prison. After the 2003 invasion, the holiday went public. Now universities across Iraqi Kurdistan close for the day. Students march with the old green-white-red flag. What started as contraband education became official curriculum. The union still exists, but now it lobbies for dorm funding instead of dodging secret police.
Flavian of Constantinople is honored today in Eastern Orthodox tradition.
Flavian of Constantinople is honored today in Eastern Orthodox tradition. He was Patriarch of Constantinople in the 5th century, deposed at the Second Council of Ephesus in 449 for opposing Eutyches' teachings on Christ's nature. The council was so violent it became known as the "Robber Council." Flavian died three days later from injuries sustained there. The next ecumenical council vindicated him posthumously and condemned the men who attacked him. His feast day marks one of the church's most brutal theological disputes — when doctrine was settled with fists.
Bernadette Soubirous saw her first vision on February 11, 1858.
Bernadette Soubirous saw her first vision on February 11, 1858. She was 14, collecting firewood near a grotto in Lourdes. She saw a woman in white who spoke to her in the local dialect, not French. The visions continued. The woman told her to dig in the mud. Water appeared. People started bathing in it. Cures were reported. The Catholic Church investigated for four years before confirming anything. Bernadette never claimed to heal anyone. She became a nun, lived with chronic illness, and died at 35. The spring still flows. Six million people visit Lourdes each year. She just said what she saw.
Nepal celebrates National Democracy Day to honor the 1951 uprising that dismantled the century-long Rana autocracy.
Nepal celebrates National Democracy Day to honor the 1951 uprising that dismantled the century-long Rana autocracy. This transition ended the hereditary prime minister system, restoring the monarchy’s authority and initiating the country’s first tentative steps toward a representative parliamentary government.
Gambia became independent from Britain on February 18, 1965.
Gambia became independent from Britain on February 18, 1965. It had been a colony for 80 years. The British kept it because of the Gambia River — a trade route into West Africa. The country is shaped like a river. It's 30 miles wide at most. Senegal wraps around it on three sides. When the British drew borders, they just traced the riverbanks and called it done. Gambia is the smallest country on mainland Africa. It exists because rivers were easier to control than roads.
The Eastern Orthodox Church doesn't follow the Gregorian calendar for most holidays.
The Eastern Orthodox Church doesn't follow the Gregorian calendar for most holidays. They use the Julian calendar, which runs 13 days behind. Christmas lands on January 7. Easter moves every year but almost never aligns with Western Easter. Fasting periods stretch for weeks—no meat, no dairy, no oil on certain days. Liturgy can last three hours. Stand the whole time. The calendar isn't just dates. It's a rhythm that's stayed unchanged since before the printing press. While the rest of the world reset their calendars in 1582, Orthodox churches said no. They're still living in a different week than you are.