Perspectives
House and Palestine
After two years, finally, through a still-blurred horizon, I can glimpse my country again. Italy had always been the most pro-Palestinian of European countries. Much depended on the fact that the old Italian Communist Party — which, at the time, was the largest in Western Europe — placed solidarity with oppressed peoples at the center of its vision. Palestine had become something of a flag of international solidarity.
By claudia esposito4 months ago in History
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 Lighthouse4 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 Lighthouse4 months ago in History
The Rock That Wasn’t a Rock: A Journey Through 724 Million Kilometers of Mystery
When we look up at the night sky, we see twinkling dots that seem calm and distant. But hidden among those stars are travelers ancient, silent wanderers that have been moving through the darkness for billions of years. This is the story of one such wanderer a story that began on Earth but ended 724 million kilometers away, on the surface of something that wasn’t what scientists thought it was.
By Izhar Ullah4 months ago in History
Who was Usama Bin Ladin
Introduction Osama bin Mohammed bin Awad bin Laden, commonly known as Osama bin Laden, remains one of the most infamous figures in modern history. As the founder and leader of al-Qaeda, he orchestrated some of the deadliest terrorist attacks in the world, including the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. His life story is a mixture of wealth, ideology, rebellion, and violence. From his privileged upbringing in Saudi Arabia to his transformation into a global symbol of jihad, bin Laden’s journey reflects the intersection of politics, religion, and extremism in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
By Fawad Khan4 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
Rumors, Roses, and a Quiet Promise: The Legend of DiMaggio and Monroe
Rumors, Roses, and a Quiet Promise: The Legend of DiMaggio and Monroe When a public romance shined as bright as Marilyn Monroe’s glow on a Hollywood stage, the afterglow can outlive the headlines. Over the years, stories about Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe have settled into the realm of myth and memory—the kind of legends that fans retell with a knowing smile, even when every detail isn’t verifiably true. Among those tales, one persists with stubborn tenderness: the idea that DiMaggio, devastated by Monroe’s death, sent red roses to her crypt three times a week for two decades, never remarried, and allegedly uttered his final words, “I’ll finally get to see Marilyn.”
By Story silver book 5 months ago in History
Amman Citadel: Layers of History and Civilization in Jordan
The Amman Citadel, perched on Jabal al-Qal’a, offers a living chronicle of civilizations stacked across time. From the Ammonites of the 9th century BCE, whose inscriptions to Milkom survive, to Roman temples, Byzantine churches, and Umayyad palaces, the site reflects continual reconstitution. The Temple of Hercules, colossal ruins, Byzantine adaptations, and Umayyad architecture illustrate layers of cultural inheritance, interrupted by earthquakes and restored in modern times. The Archaeological Museum, once home to the Dead Sea Scrolls, deepens the story. Visiting reveals more than ruins—it is a lesson in how civilizations adapt, recycle, and endure, while raising questions about humanity’s future.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen5 months ago in History
The Parachute Wedding Dress: How Ruth Hensinger Turned WWII Survival Silk into Bridal Magic
The Parachute Wedding Dress: How Ruth Hensinger Turned WWII Survival Silk into Bridal Magic Imagine a pilot drifting down from a burning plane, his parachute the only thing between him and certain death. That same parachute, once a tool of survival in World War II, becomes the fabric of a bride's dream gown. In 1947, Ruth Hensinger sewed her wedding dress by hand from the nylon parachute that saved her fiancé's life, turning a symbol of war into one of love and hope.
By Story silver book 5 months ago in History










