
It’s Masipasi (Emancipation Day): The day in 1863 that slavery was abolished in Suriname.
The day is also known as Keti Koti.
Keti: chains
Koti: cut


It’s Masipasi (Emancipation Day): The day in 1863 that slavery was abolished in Suriname.
The day is also known as Keti Koti.
Keti: chains
Koti: cut


Born in 1966 – John Cusack, American actor and screenwriter.
Above: Cusack in Cameron Crowe’s 1989 film, Say Anything.

Born in 1958 – Lisa Germano, American singer-songwriter and violinist.
Listen to “You Make Me Wanna Wear Dresses” from 1993:

Born in 1904 – Peter Lorre, Slovak-American actor and singer.
Above: Lorre in Fritz Lang’s 1931 film M.

Born in 1903 – George Orwell, British novelist, essayist, and critic.
A couple of things he wrote in 1946:
“The great enemy of clear language is insincerity. When there is a gap between one’s real and one’s declared aims, one turns as it were instinctively to long words and exhausted idioms, like a cuttlefish spurting out ink.”
“Political language — and with variations this is true of all political parties, from Conservatives to Anarchists — is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”
–from “Politics and the English Language”

Born in 1930 – Claude Chabrol, French actor, director, producer, and screenwriter.
Above: Sandrine Bonnaire and Isabelle Huppert in Chabrol’s 1995 film, La Cérémonie.

Born in 1889 – Anna Akhmatova, Ukrainian-Russian poet and author.
Lot’s Wife
And the just man trailed God’s shining agent,
over a black mountain, in his giant track,
while a restless voice kept harrying his woman:
“It’s not too late, you can still look back
at the red towers of your native Sodom,
the square where once you sang, the spinning-shed,
at the empty windows set in the tall house
where sons and daughters blessed your marriage-bed.”
A single glance: a sudden dart of pain
stitching her eyes before she made a sound …
Her body flaked into transparent salt,
and her swift legs rooted to the ground.
Who will grieve for this woman? Does she not seem
too insignificant for our concern?
Yet in my heart I never will deny her,
who suffered death because she chose to turn.

Born in 1940 – Abbas Kiarostami, Iranian director, producer, screenwriter, and photographer.
Above: Untitled (from Kiarostami’s Rain and Wind Series, 2007)

Born in 1905 – Jean-Paul Sartre, French philosopher and playwright.
“Dostoevsky once wrote: ‘If God did not exist, everything would be permitted’; and that, for existentialism, is the starting point. Everything is indeed permitted if God does not exist, and man is in consequence forlorn, for he cannot find anything to depend upon either within or outside himself. He discovers forthwith, that he is without excuse.”

Born in 1948 – Nick Drake, English singer-songwriter.
Above: Young Nick with mother Molly.
Listen to “Road” from the 1972 album Pink Moon: