User:Itai
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- | This user is a translator from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
- | This user is a translator and proofreader from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/July 16
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(No longer Away.)
My Wikipedia time is limited at the moment, but I'm still around.
- ... that the H. J. Lovink Pumping Station (pictured), a national monument of the Netherlands, was used to reclaim the Flevopolder?
- ... that during the 1899–1900 peasant unrest in Bulgaria, some troops refused orders to fire on the protesters?
- ... that the winner of the seventeenth series of Britain's Got Talent was the first individual woman to win the show without a dog?
- ... that the moat around Pinxton Castle was inside the perimeter walls, rather than outside?
- ... that William Beck emigrated to the US from Germany, became a policeman at 19, was wounded by a Native American tribe, and was shipwrecked before becoming Milwaukee's first police chief?
- ... that a Texas TV station hoped that being named after an eye would ease viewer confusion?
- ... that Pharos, the largest impact crater on Neptune's moon Proteus, is more than half the diameter of Proteus itself?
- ... that in his book How to Be Perfect, Michael Schur sought to "wade into some deeply confusing and painful applications of moral philosophy ... but in a fun way"?
- ... that a video accompanying ML Buch's debut album showed viewers her inner self – literally?
Snake handling in Christianity is a rite performed in several churches in the United States. Originating in rural Appalachia, the first instance of snake handling was seen about 1910. Pentecostal minister George Went Hensley was prominent in the early development of the rite. Practitioners commonly quote the gospels of Luke and Mark to support the practice. Practitioners are also encouraged to lay hands on the sick, speak in tongues, and occasionally drink poisons. This photograph, taken by the American photographer Russell Lee in 1946, depicts snake handling at the Church of God with Signs Following, a Pentecostal church in Lejunior, Kentucky.Photograph credit: Russell Lee; restored by Adam Cuerden
4 July 2024 |