Narratives
The Forgotten Fields: Part I – Baseball
If you stand on a quiet summer field somewhere in the Midwest, you can still hear it... The faint echo of leather against leather, the soft thud of a ball in a glove, the ghostly cheer of a crowd that has long since gone home. The weeds have grown over the baselines, the scoreboard has lost its numbers, and the bleachers sag beneath decades of rain. But the sound remains. It drifts on the wind like a hymn.
By The Iron Lighthouse5 months ago in History
Timeless Tales of Japan: The Magic and Morality of Traditional Folklore
How centuries-old Japanese folktales still guide hearts and minds today From the snowy mountains of Hokkaido to the tranquil islands of Okinawa, Japan’s folktales have traveled through generations like whispered dreams by the fireside. These timeless stories, often featuring brave heroes, mischievous spirits, and talking animals, reveal not only Japan’s imagination but also its moral compass — teaching lessons about kindness, humility, and respect for nature.
By Takashi Nagaya5 months ago in History
Lisbon: The City of Light and Resilience . AI-Generated.
Nestled along the banks of the Tagus River, where the water widens and meets the Atlantic Ocean, stands Lisbon, one of Europe’s oldest and most soulful capitals. Known for its golden light, steep cobblestone streets, and melancholic melodies of fado, Lisbon is a city that has risen—time and again—from the ashes of history to shine brighter than before.
By Gonçalo Sequeira5 months ago in History
The Dog That Didn't Turn
This incident sheds light on a very thought-provoking detail in Surah Al-Kahf Question: Why is the dog mentioned as "spreading its forelegs" in Surah Al-Kahf? And when the Companions of the Cave were turning to their right and left sides, why wasn't the dog turning?
By Article Writing Master5 months ago in History
The Forgotten Fields - A 10 Part Series
By The Iron Lighthouse If you listen closely on a still summer evening, you can almost hear them... faint echoes carried on the wind. The crack of a wooden bat. The whistle of a coach with more spirit than players. The hum of a crowd huddled on splintered bleachers, wrapped in the kind of excitement that never needed a scoreboard to matter.
By The Iron Lighthouse5 months ago in History
The Unfolding Self
Life is not a straight line but a rich, meandering path through distinct and beautiful landscapes. Each of us embarks on a remarkable voyage from the dawn of childhood to the twilight of old age a journey that shapes, refines, and ultimately reveals the essence of who we are. This passage, with all its joys and challenges, is the universal human story.
By Article Writing Master5 months ago in History
Who changed the Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday?
When is the Sabbath Day? Some believers in Christ say they attend church services on Sunday because it is the Christian Sabbath. The Bible indicates that God created the earth in six days and He rested on the seventh. Saturday is the Sabbath of the Lord, which the children of Israel were commanded to observe.
By Cheryl E Preston5 months ago in History
Potawatomi. AI-Generated.
Where the Earth Still Speaks and the Sky Still Listens The morning mist rolled softly across the edge of the forest, carrying with it the quiet songs of the river. The Potawatomi people called this land Bodewadmi, “the Keepers of the Fire,” for they believed that the flame of life and wisdom must never be allowed to die.
By shakir hamid5 months ago in History
Roadside America & The Giant Fiberglass Statues
Somewhere out on Route 66, the sun is low, the asphalt hums, and the family station wagon’s AC isn’t quite keeping up. The kids are restless, Mom is flipping through the AAA TripTik, and Dad’s patience is hanging by a thread when suddenly... there it is! A massive, square-jawed Paul Bunyan figure looms on the horizon, clutching a hot dog the size of a telephone pole. Cameras click, kids scream, and Dad pulls over with a grin.
By The Iron Lighthouse5 months ago in History
The Iron Fist of Karanja: Rise and Fall of General Nyota. AI-Generated.
In the dusty hills of Karanja, a small East African nation, Samuel Nyota was born in 1948 into a poor farming family. His father toiled in the fields, his mother raised him and his siblings under the unforgiving sun, and from an early age, Samuel learned that life rewarded the strong and punished the weak. Tall, imposing, and fiercely intelligent, he quickly realized that survival required more than hard work — it demanded cunning, strategy, and ruthlessness.
By shakir hamid5 months ago in History
The Tyrant of Uganda: The Rise and Fall of Idi Amin. AI-Generated.
The story of Idi Amin Dada begins far from the marble halls of power — in a small village in northwestern Uganda, around 1925. Born into poverty among the Kakwa ethnic group, Amin’s early years were marked by hardship and survival. His father abandoned the family, and his mother, a herbalist, raised him in the shadow of colonial rule. He had little education, but he possessed an intimidating physical strength — tall, broad-shouldered, and fiercely ambitious.
By shakir hamid5 months ago in History











