April 22
Holidays
11 holidays recorded on April 22 throughout history
Quote of the Day
“We are not rich by what we possess but by what we can do without.”
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April 22nd isn't just another date in the Orthodox calendar; it's where St.
April 22nd isn't just another date in the Orthodox calendar; it's where St. Theodora of Alexandria and her brother St. Theodore were dragged before a Roman governor who demanded they renounce their faith or face execution. They chose death over denial, enduring torture that left them broken yet unyielding. Their refusal didn't stop the empire, but it sparked a quiet fire in Alexandria that refused to go out. Now when you hear the name "Theodora," remember she wasn't a statue on a wall, but a woman who traded her life for a belief she couldn't explain.
Serbia's Holocaust Remembrance Day carries particular weight.
Serbia's Holocaust Remembrance Day carries particular weight. During the Axis occupation of 1941-44, about 15,000 Serbian Jews were killed — roughly 90% of the Jewish population that had lived there before the war. The Sajmište concentration camp, located in what was then the puppet state of Croatia but is now part of Belgrade, processed thousands of victims. Serbian collaboration with Nazi killing operations was extensive and documented. The day of remembrance exists against that background — not just grief for the dead, but a reckoning with what happened in the country's own history.
Abel McAedh didn't just walk into a monastery; he vanished into a stone cell to starve himself until his bones felt l…
Abel McAedh didn't just walk into a monastery; he vanished into a stone cell to starve himself until his bones felt like hollow flutes. He refused food for three weeks so his voice could carry the gospel across the misty Irish bogs where no one else dared tread. That hunger broke him, yet it built the first bridges of faith in the British Isles. People still whisper his name when they light candles on the longest night. He didn't conquer a kingdom; he conquered silence with an empty stomach.
Brazil's Fighter Aviation Day marks the nation's combat debut in the Second World War.
Brazil's Fighter Aviation Day marks the nation's combat debut in the Second World War. Brazilian pilots flew P-47 Thunderbolts with the American 12th Air Force over northern Italy in 1944 and 1945. The Brazilian Expeditionary Force was the only South American military unit to see combat in Europe during the war. At home, Brazil had been providing the Allies with rubber, minerals, and Atlantic air bases since 1942. Fighter Aviation Day commemorates the moment that contribution became visible — pilots in cockpits with Brazilian markings over Italian mountains.
Millions of people across the globe participate in Earth Day to advocate for environmental protection and sustainable…
Millions of people across the globe participate in Earth Day to advocate for environmental protection and sustainable policy. Launched in 1970, the movement successfully pressured the United States government to establish the Environmental Protection Agency, eventually sparking the creation of similar regulatory bodies and conservation laws in over 190 countries worldwide.
A black cab driver's lie about seeing Stephen Lawrence changed everything.
A black cab driver's lie about seeing Stephen Lawrence changed everything. But the Macpherson Inquiry exposed a force of 70 officers who didn't just fail; they lied, and that silence lasted decades. Families waited years for justice while racism festered in plain sight. Now, every May 22nd, people stand in Eltham to say the work isn't done. We remember Stephen not as a statistic, but as the spark that forced Britain to finally look in the mirror.
Two men, Epipodius and Alexander, were dragged through Lyon's streets in 177 AD while the crowd screamed for blood.
Two men, Epipodius and Alexander, were dragged through Lyon's streets in 177 AD while the crowd screamed for blood. They refused to trade their faith for a quick death, choosing execution over denial. Their bodies became fuel for a fire that only made Christianity more visible across the Roman Empire. You can still trace the path they walked today. Their silence spoke louder than the emperor's edicts ever could.
Acepsimas of Hnaita didn't just preach; he stared down Roman soldiers with three companions and walked straight into …
Acepsimas of Hnaita didn't just preach; he stared down Roman soldiers with three companions and walked straight into their swords. They were a tight-knit group who refused to bow, turning a quiet village in Syria into a stage for ultimate defiance. Their blood soaked the earth there, sparking a ripple of courage that kept early Christianity alive when emperors tried to crush it. You'll tell your friends tonight that faith isn't just belief—it's the terrifying choice to stand still while the world spins away from you.
He didn't just walk; he screamed at the granite until it cracked.
He didn't just walk; he screamed at the granite until it cracked. John Muir spent 1872 sleeping under a redwood in Yosemite for three days, refusing to move until General John Pope signed an order protecting the valley from loggers. That stubbornness saved two million acres of ancient forest and gave birth to the National Park Service. We still hike his trails today, but remember: every time we step off the path, we honor the man who taught us that nature isn't scenery—it's a witness we can't afford to silence.
Pedro Álvares Cabral didn't plan to land here; he missed the route to India and drifted straight into Bahia.
Pedro Álvares Cabral didn't plan to land here; he missed the route to India and drifted straight into Bahia. On April 22, 1500, his fleet of thirteen ships met a people who'd never seen a sail or iron before. Within months, Portuguese settlers began cutting down the Atlantic Forest for brazilwood, displacing thousands who'd lived there for millennia without a single battle fought that day. Today marks the start of a collision between two worlds, but it feels less like discovery and more like an accidental theft of a future.
He didn't just climb; he conquered Denali's brutal spine in 1913 with four men, freezing fingers gripping rope while …
He didn't just climb; he conquered Denali's brutal spine in 1913 with four men, freezing fingers gripping rope while hunger gnawed at their stomachs. Hudson Stuck pushed them over the peak after a grueling month of battling blizzards that nearly killed everyone. The Episcopal Church now honors this sheer will on May 16th. That day reminds us faith isn't just about prayer; it's about standing on the edge of death and choosing to go higher anyway.