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  • Recent Official Blog Posts

    • Dr. Watson
      7 comments
      Welcome all, to the eleventh issue of the Dominican Dispatch!
       
       
      House News
      By: The Editor (@Dr. Watson)
       
      To begin with, Dominican has experienced changes with regards to its leadership in the past few days. Recently, @TheEfficientBaxter resigned due to personal reasons. Many thanks for your past service! Such shall be remembered, and your extensive legacy will doubtless not be forgotten. Following this, @Tillie_the_Turtle was appointed as a replacement. Congratulations on your promotion! Your reign shall doubtless provide many achievements. 
      As with previous times, several events are in progress, such as the April Debate Call, and a Fallacy Frenzy game of sorts. Details for both events can be found at the respective links provided. 
      In a complimentary way to the prior theme for our house and so forth, a flag has been adopted, of which the specifics can be found in this topic. 
      A poll has been made on the topic of whether or not Disputations should be used solely for the olden resolution debate format of pre-2022.
      Additionally, the monthly statistics shall be posted below for a historical record of sorts, among other reasons: 
      Current member count: 119 Highest member count: 119 Current topic count: 412 Disputations count: 161 Current post count: ~43.2K.  Most popular debate: Was the US justified in dropping the atomic bombs on Japan in WWII? with 1.3K views and 188 replies. Finally, we wish to welcome our newest members of Dominican: 
      @ehicks, @longshanks23, @lucyAG28, and @BellaFigueroa08.
      Welcome, all! May you enjoy your extensive sojourn. 
       
       
       
       
      The Controversy Column
      There’s a suggested resolution for a debate at the end of each controversial article. Anyone is welcome to start that debate or one on the topic in Dominican’s Disputations. The author does not have to participate in the debate if it occurs, but it is assumed that what they say in the article will be taken account of in the debate.
       
      The Historical Discordance Between Israel and Palestine
      By: @Maurne R. Heroux
      On October 7th, 2023, Hamas, a Palestinian militant movement, launched an air, land, and sea attack on Israel from the Gaza Strip, taking people hostages, and the 1,300 deaths of Israeli citizens became the aftermath. Israel declared its state of war the next day, and the war began with Israeli Defense Forces executing air strikes on the Gaza Strip following the arrival of ground troops and armored vehicles. Dating to the end of the 19th century, the conflict between Israel and Palestine began. What was the main reason why the conflict between Israel and Palestine even existed? Why is it that until now, the conflict between the two countries has not ended? 
      Predicaments the Jews faced in Europe in the late 19th century were part of the conflict's rationale. German authorities relegated the Jews to ghettos, which was the term for Nazi-controlled cities where German officials focused on the Jewish populations. They were also subject to starvation, discrimination, and economically marginalized because of their declining economic usefulness and social and religious status, which led to their eviction from England in 1290 and France in 1306. By the end of the 1870s, even when the Jewish community concentrated on Jerusalem, Safed, Tiberias, and Hebron, they still experienced discrimination for who they were. Others treated them as merely scattered people and faced crowded, unsanitary conditions, deteriorated housing, poverty, malnutrition, and disease in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem.
      A primary home of the Jewish diaspora was the Russian Empire. After the failure of the first Russian Revolution in 1905, many Jews from Eastern Europe and Russia began moving to Palestine. Had the Jews then found a homeland of safety and security? When the Spanish sovereignty in 1492 expelled the Jewish population residing in Spain, including those fleeing from religious persecution approaching the 20th century, refugees turned to Palestine. During the 1881 massacre of Jews by Russia, known as pogroms, another number of Jews moved and settled in Palestine. It was in the presence of other nations that a dream of a safe and secure homeland for the Jews experienced the most turbulence, specifically when Britain and France played a role in the conflict between Israel and Palestine of what it is today.
      In 1917, former British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour wrote to Lionel Walter Rothschild, a Zionist leader, about The Balfour Declaration, which promised the establishment of Palestine as a national home for the Jews. The legacy of The Balfour Declaration is one of the factors for the existence of the State of Israel. According to the mandate system of the Treaty of Versailles of 1919, the temporary administration of Palestine became entrusted to Britain in agreement that it would oversee its Jewish and Arab occupants. Arabs and Palestinians were infuriated by their failure to receive the nationhood as expected in return for their participation in the war against Turkey. After World War I, the Jewish population in Palestine immensely increased, along with instances of Jewish-Arab violence, and due to the instability of Palestine, Britain delayed deciding its future.
      However, after the Holocaust and World War II, international support for Zionism grew, which led to the official declaration of the nation of Israel in 1948. Another power, France, emerged wherein Napoléon Bonaparte proclaimed to offer Palestine as a homeland for Jews under the protection of France in 1799 to win Jewish aid in his invasion of Egypt. The Sykes-Picot Agreement was a clandestine consensus between the two countries to advance the settlement of a Jewish homeland, which, however, only remained a promise. At the end of World War II, when Jewish settlers discovered the British were still reluctant to leave Jerusalem. As a result, they attacked the British soldiers and authorities. These attacks were part of a campaign by Jewish militants to force the British to withdraw from Palestine and allow the creation of a Jewish state. The most famous attack was the bombing of the King David Hotel in July 1946, the headquarters of the British administration in Palestine.
      The bombing of King David Hotel killed 91 people, including 28 British civilians, and became condemned, to which the United Nations adopted Resolution 181, the Partition Plan for Palestine of 1947. Within the same time frame, the Palestinians also dealt with discord. The Palestinians rejected Resolution 181 for two reasons. Firstly, Jews were given 56% of Palestine despite consisting of only 33% of the population. Secondly, Resolution 181 allocated the fertile coastal region to the Jews. 
      Until then, Jews owned 6% of the Palestinian land. Soon, Jews began occupying the land designed for them, and the Palestinians fought back, but without much success. By May of 1948, Jews controlled most of the land promised to them, including Arab territories. It aimed to divide the British Mandate into Arab and Jewish domains, which brought into existence the State of Israel that sparked the Arab-Jewish war on May 14th, 1948. The Israelis were victorious at the end of the war, and 75,000 Palestinians were displaced, wherein the state became divided into three parts, which were the State of Israel, the West Bank of the Jordan River, and the Gaza Strip. Consequential events followed, such as the tension between Middle Eastern countries Egypt, Israel, Jordan, and Syria. 
      Contrarily, peace negotiations occurred in 1979, ending the thirty-year war between Egypt and Israel. However, while armistices were successful between Israel and its neighbors, the progressing conflict with Palestine remained unresolved. After the Six-Day War, Israel gained control over the Sinai Peninsula, the Gaza Strip from Egypt, the West Bank, East Jerusalem from Jordan, and the Golan Heights from Syria. During the Yom Kippur War, Egypt and Syria launched a two-front attack. 
      In 1993, the Israeli Prime Minister and the Palestinian Liberation Organization signed the Oslo Accords. It was the first direct Israel-Palestinian peace agreement, and it has set up a framework for the Palestinians' self-governance in the West Bank and Gaza. Israeli and Palestinian leadership recognized each other for the first time. Thereupon, the Oslo II Accords were signed in 1995 to expand on the first agreement, adding provisions that mandated the complete withdrawal of Israel from 6 cities and 450 towns in the West Bank. Between 2014 and 2021, a series of attacks, clashes, and violence characterized the conflict.
      In 2014, a military confrontation between the Israeli military and Hamas fired nearly a thousand rockets at Israel despite these accords, which Israel retaliated with an offensive in Gaza. The confrontation ended in August 2014 with a cease-fire deal brokered by Egypt, but only after 73 Israelis and 2,251 Palestinians died. After waves of violence in 2015, President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah announced that the boundaries of territorial divisions for Palestinians would no longer be effective, which was created by the Oslo Accords. Israeli troops killed 183 and wounded 6,000 Palestinians in March 2018 because of the rock-throwing implemented by the Palestinians between the Gaza Strip and Israel fence. Shortly after, Hamas militants fired over one hundred rockets into Israel, to which Israel responded with strikes on more than fifty targets in Gaza. In May 2021, protests erupted after a court ruled in favor of evicting Palestinian families from East Jerusalem properties, and after consecutive days of violence, Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups launched hundreds of rockets into Israeli territory.
      Israel retaliated with airstrikes and artillery bombardments, impacting military and non-military infrastructures, residential buildings, media headquarters, and refugee and healthcare establishments. All of these led up to the incident of October 2023. Even after decades of discord, neither nation sustained a truce or peace negotiation long enough to settle a permanent understanding of both perspectives. Within current developments and after the attack in October 2023, Israel ordered the evacuation of more than one million Palestinian civilians in northern Gaza ahead of a ground invasion on October 27th. After decades of discord, the refusal by the Arab population of the mandate territory to accept Resolution 181 demonstrated that they were not interested in establishing their state if it meant allowing the existence of a Jewish state. This opposition to acknowledging the right of a Jewish state to exist still lies at the core of the conflict.
      To this day, Israel and Palestine are fighting over three stretches of land. Palestine claims to have East Jerusalem as its capital, quarreling over the West Bank and the state of Jerusalem, as Israel states Jerusalem should remain as its eternal capital.  
       
       
      Theological Reflections
       
      Fiat
      By: @TheEfficientBaxter
      Last Monday, the Church celebrated the Feast of the Annunciation. This major feast is customarily observed on March 25th expect when that date falls during Holy Week like it did this year. In such cases, it is delayed a fortnight so that it could be celebrated with proper solemnity. On this day, the Church remembers the Angel Gabriel’s announcement to the Blessed Virgin Mary that she is to be the Mother of God, her assenting Fiat, and the subsequent Incarnation of the Word in her pure womb. This is one of the most key events of history, yet one that is easy to take for granted.
      Many people never stop to consider if it could have gone differently. Our Lady had free will like all humans and did not have to consent to Divine Motherhood. Moreover, God miraculously enabled her to understand the consequences of decision: the suffering and glorification it would entail for her and Jesus without being overwhelmed by that knowledge because He wanted her consent to be whole-hearted. With this illumination, Our Lady was equipped to giver her free and total consent or rejection.
      When Gabriel delivered God’s invitation to Mary and waited for her response, the fate of the world hung in balance. The work of four thousand years of miracles, prophecies, and preparation for the Redemption would all be fruitless or come to abundant fruition in Our Lady’s answer. If she declined her role in the drama of mankind’s redemption, it would not mean that men would never be saved, but how many millennia would it take God’s second attempt? It took Him four thousand years in the first one. Furthermore, millions of souls would not experience the merits from Christ’s Sacrifice on Calvary. However, if Mary accepted this offer, these souls could have the hope of salvation and those years of preparation for the Messiah would not be wasted. Then, came her reply, “Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it done to me according to thy word” (Luke 1:38). At that moment, the Holy Ghost overshadowed her, and “the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us” (John 1:14).
      Each person ever created is irreplaceable with a unique mission from God that only he or she can fulfill. While it may not be as obvious or dramatic as that of Our Blessed Mother, it is nevertheless crucial. Countless souls depended on whether Our Lady fulfilled her mission, and countless souls depend on those alive today to whom God asks, as he did the prophet Isaias, “Whom shall I send? And who shall go for us?” to bear witness to the Truth and spread the Gospel to the ends of the earth (Isaias 6:8a). Will they join Mary’s Fiat and Isaias in saying, “Lo, here am I, send me” (Isaias 6:8b)?
      (All quotes from the Bible are taken from https://drbo.org/)
       
       
       
      The Science Section
       
      Dwarf Planet Series Finale: Ceres
      By: @Tillie_the_Turtle
      Pluto, Eris, Haumea, and many others have one thing in common: they exist beyond Neptune in the farthest reaches of our solar system, but that is actually not a defining feature of dwarf planets. One exception to this trend is Ceres, the biggest thing in the asteroid belt, and its unique position compared to other dwarf planets has implications from its history to its composition and possibility for life.
      Ceres was discovered before the asteroid belt by Italian astronomer, Giuseppe Piazzi, on January 1, 1801, while he was searching for a star. The newly discovered planet was named after the Roman goddess of corn and harvests. In fact, the word cereal comes from the name Ceres. After the discovery, many other objects were discovered in the same area, all smaller than Ceres. The list of planets grew to include Pallas, Juno, Vesta, and many others until it eventually became clear that the progressively smaller findings were asteroids in a region that came to be known as the asteroid belt. Although much larger than all the asteroids, comprising 25% of the asteroid belt's total mass, with enough gravity to be round, Ceres was roped in with the others and declared an asteroid. It may be because of the demotion of Pluto that no one noticed, but for Ceres, the 2006 recategorization and redefinition of planets was actually an upgrade. Having been mislabelled as an asteroid for years, Ceres was officially noted to be a dwarf planet instead.
      That’s the history of Ceres, at least, from Earth’s perspective, but Ceres’ location has affected its history in physical ways as well as in how we thought of the planet. Because of its closeness to Jupiter, Ceres is what scientists call an “embryonic planet,” meaning it is a planet that started to form but didn't quite finish because Jupiter's strong gravity prevented it from becoming fully formed. Ceres’ closeness to the sun compared to other dwarfs also affects it. The cold but not impossible temperature on Ceres as well as the possibility that Ceres has more water than Earth does means there could be microscopic life or evidence of extinct microscopic life to be found there. Ceres could be composed of as much as 25% water, most of which is in its water-ice mantle. (Note that asteroids don’t have mantles, cores, or anything like them, another reason Ceres is more like a terrestrial planet than an asteroid.) This means it could experience cryovolcanism, tectonic and volcanic activity that involves liquids and vapors that would be frozen solid at the planetary surface temperatures of icy bodies but are liquid or gaseous because they were stored in the mantle before erupting. This could explain why Ceres’ crust has large salt deposits, and why, despite what should be a constant battering of asteroids on the planet, its many craters are small and young. According to NASA, “The surface features could smooth out over time if ice or another lower-density material, such as salt, is just below the surface. It's also possible that past hydrothermal activity, such as ice volcanoes, erased some large craters.”
      Finally, because of its closeness to Earth compared to the others, Ceres was the first dwarf planet to be visited by spacecraft. This was called the Dawn Mission in which an unmanned (obviously) orbiter went to Vesta, the giant asteroid once considered a planet, and Ceres in 2012 and 2016 respectively. This mission is the source of most of what we know about Ceres. This includes an explanation for Ceres’ unique bright spots, which, it turns out, are caused by salt deposits. Dawn also found recently emerged liquid on Ceres’ surface.
      This, as with every article in this series, is just scratching the salty surface of what there is to know about Ceres. Usually, this is where the hint at the next article would be, but alas, even though there are more dwarf planets to look into and so much more to say about each one, this introductory series ends here. If it was successful in piquing your interest in the dwarf planets, the reddish brown, slow-orbiting Makemake is a good planet to research next. You could even go back and learn more about one of the ones I covered in this series. Pluto and its moons, for example, have much more to tell.
       
       
      L’Article de Belles-Lettres
      Though the modern meaning of Belles-Lettres is generally literature that does not fall into the main genres, it originally, and literally, meant "beautiful writing". 
       
      A Man of Many Gifts
      By: @TheEfficientBaxter
      Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski was born on December 3, 1857 in a Polish province under Russian occupation to parents of the Polish aristocracy.  He entered the French merchant marine at the age of seventeen to avoid conscription in the Russian military. Conrad then spent the next twenty years of his life as a seaman, switching to the British merchant marine in 1878. In 1886, he became both a captain and a British subject. Around 1894, he retired from life on the sea and began writing. Over the next thirty years, Conrad drew from the wealth of his travels around the world as well as his cosmopolitan background to author numerous novels and short stories under the penname Joseph Conrad, an Anglicized version of his given name. In 1924, he passed away from a heart attack at the age of sixty-six.
      Joseph Conrad was a truly remarkable man who achieved more in one lifetime than most people ever dream of. To begin with, he had two full careers in such distinct areas as the sea and the literary world. In the first, he travelled through the Caribbean, South America, Europe, Africa, India, southeast Asia, and Australia. In the latter, he became a notable author not in his first but in his third language, his first two languages being Polish and French. Few people have travelled as much as Joseph Conrad did, and fewer still write true works of literature in their own language let alone a third one.
      It is difficult to convey the greatness of his literary works, the broad range of topics they cover, and the depth at which he probes the human experience. By no means a light author, Joseph Conrad is one of the greats and worth the effort it takes to read his writings. According to the Athenium Review, his best works are Heart of Darkness (1899) and Lord Jim (1900).
      (Main source for this article was the Introduction written by A. Michael Matin to Barnes & Noble Classics’ publishing of Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad.)
       
       
      Cultural Corner
       
      Welcome to the Ceilidh!
      By: @Mairi
      The Gaels, who emigrated from Scotland and Ireland to Nova Scotia in the tens of thousands throughout the 1800s, have largely influenced the culture of the province. Many of the cultural Gaelic events are still happening today, such as the milling frolic, which I discussed in my previous article. Another of these events is the Ceilidh (KAY-lee), which translates directly to “visit” in English. It is also sometimes referred to as a “kitchen party.” A Ceilidh often includes Gaelic singing, traditional music, step dancing, and storytelling. 
      The term “Ceilidh” covers a wide variety of events. For example, sometimes people hold large events that are more like concerts with traditional Gaelic music and refreshments and call that a Ceilidh. Another kind of Ceilidh might just be a visit between just two people. You might hear someone say “So-and-so stopped by to pick up the book she lent me and she sat down for a cup of tea and we had a nice little Ceilidh.” The third picture of a Ceilidh that I will give you aligns more with the term “kitchen party.” These are get-togethers in people’s homes that can be either planned or completely spontaneous. At one of these, it is normal to see people sitting or standing around the kitchen enjoying food, hot tea, and friendship. The lyrics of The Mull River Shuffle (a Nova Scotia song by the Rankin Family) give a pretty good idea of what the general atmosphere is like with the words, “You're sitting around the kitchen table under the dim light of a kerosene lantern; everyone is laughing and joking and telling stories about their neighbours.” Someone might then sit down at the piano and somebody else pulls out his fiddle. They are just starting to play, and then someone else has gotten up and began to step dance. Soon, the whole party is tapping their feet to the music (no clapping to the music), and people are pulling out their instruments to join in the familiar tunes. Everyone is joyful and lighthearted, with smiles on their faces. As a lifelong Nova Scotia resident, I have been to a wide variety of Ceilidhs, and I never get tired of them. They are important events that keep the Gaelic culture and traditions alive and help bring friends, family, and even whole communities together.
       
       
      The Home for History
       
      Kings Crusade Battle: Siege of Arce
      By: @Samurai
      In 1187 the initial Crusader host set siege to Arce in order to weaken the islamic hold upon the holy land.  As Arce was a crusail port city for the kingdom of Jerusalem before its fall.  Saladin too saw its worth as a future base for new crusader hosts.  So he fortified and garrisoned the city as it was an arms depot, and a port of great wealth.  Guy of Lusignan, a key crusader figure per the third crusade mustard a force of 7000 men 400 knights and a small fleet.  Rallied at  tyre, as Conrad of Montferrat was currently ruling it he had stood garrison and defeated islamic forces while Guy feld.  And Conrad refused to yield control of the Guy’s last remaining stronghold.  As Conrad had rightfully won it by right of conquest Guy was forced to ask Conrad’s help in taking Acre as it represented Guy’s greatest chance at reclaiming the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Then marching on Arce and supported by Tyre and a Small Pisan fleet.  Guy set siege to Acre.  a force of 12,000 troops from Denmark, Germany, England, France, Frisia, and Flanders reinforced Guy as they besieged Acre.  due to the garrison's defenses the fleet could not properly blockade the city and due to the presence of elite troops the Crusaders were unable to beat them in the land battle.   Then saladin’s host set siege to the siegers.  Sorties and assaults by both the crusaders and the Islamic hosts were unable to dislodge each other.  The garrison barely held the city.  The crusaders were unable to take the city.  And saladin unable to break the siege, as the crusaders had entrenched their forces.  This stalemate lasted for more than two years until king Richard arrived and with his superior fleet, Saladin was unable to continue his resupply of the Arce and it now became a race against time.  But with additional English and french hosts bolstering the ranks of the Crusaders and new siege equipment supplied by Richard.  it became clear to the garrison that the so called “great” Saladin could no longer save them and after one last assault by the garrison surrendered under the promise that Saladin would ransom for their freedom.  As the crusaders had recently lost battles, Saladin had many Crusader prisoners. Saladin and Richard came to agreements as to the rates at which they would exchange prisoners.  It worked out that Saladin would pay reparations and release all Christian soldiers.  Delivering the pay meant and realizing the crusaders in small deposits Saladin deviously broke his word time and time again to bring less gold and fewer prisoners than promised in an attempt to stall the crusaders.  Richard quickly caught on and after three warnings by richard and continued offenses saladin forced richards hand and richard marched the remainder of the islamic garrison out and had them executed.   Richard is attacked for this but Saladin is to blame.  As he was attempting to waste Richard’s time, time that Richard would need.  Saladin was gambling with his men's lives, and all of saladins supporters blamed him for the fate of there troops at Acre.  By doing this Richard made Saladin’s troops unwilling to main garrisons which saved more Christian lives. This represented the first of Richards' victories against Saladin.  And if not for infighting amongst the crusader hosts as well as foreign threats to England Richard would have destroyed saladin's kingdom
       
       
      Saintly Synopsis
       
      St. Marguerite Bourgeoys
      By: @Mairi
      Marguerite Bourgeoys was born at Troyes, France on April 17, 1620, the sixth of twelve children. When her mother died when Marguerite was only 19 years old, she helped to raise her siblings. When she was twenty, Marguerite had a conversion experience during a religious procession that influenced her future mission and focused her values. She felt called by the Blessed Virgin, and in response she joined a local group of women who gathered to do charitable work as an extension of a cloister in Troyes. St. Marguerite became the leader of this extern group, and she taught the children in the poorer areas.
       In 1653, after her siblings were raised and her father had passed away, Marguerite was invited by Paul de Maisoneuve, the founder of Montreal, to come with him to the New World as a teacher. She would instruct the children of the settlement and those of the Native Americans. Marguerite accepted the offer and, after giving away her inheritance to family members, she departed from Nantes on a three-month voyage across the Atlantic.
      On the ship that brought her from France to Canada, an epidemic broke out and Marguerite cared for the sick and buried the dead. After a long crossing over the Atlantic, she arrived in Ville-Marie, as Montreal was known at that time. She began construction of a chapel to honor Our Lady of Good Help. On April 30, 1658, Marguerite opened her first school in a stable that had been given to her by Paul de Maisoneuve. She opened a boarding school for girls in Montreal, a domestic arts school, and a school for Indigenous girls on the reserve of La Montagne, recruiting French and Canadian girls as teachers. In 1659 and then again in 1670, Marguerite made the long journey back to France to recruit more teachers.
      Marguerite was a very religious person, having a deep faith and a love of serving God through serving others. Marguerite visited the sick, buried the dead, consoled the conflicted, and taught the catechism to settlers. She and her companions formed a religious congregation, but were not allowed to take official vows until 1698. Bishop Saint-Vallier invited Marguerite and her companions to open a school on the Île d'Orléans. Soon, they had a domestic arts school and a primary school in the town of Québec. Marguerite and her sisters eventually opened little schools all over New France.
      They helped the people of the colony to survive when food was scarce and taught young people how to run a home and farm. Soon, Marguerite’s congregation numbered 18 sisters, seven of whom were Canadians. Marguerite formed respectful ties with the First Nations and welcomed immigrants to the colony, teaching them how to survive in their new home. These immigrants included the Filles du Roy, girls brought from France to marry settlers and populate the New World. Marguerite died on January 12, 1700, a victim of fever, having spent the last two years of her life in prayer and meditation.
      Marguerite left a lasting impression on the history of Montreal and the history of education in Canada. She is remembered for her spirituality, her hard work, and her impact on society and the Church in North America. Marguerite opened the First school in New France, and significantly contributed to the development of what is now the city of Montreal. In 1982, Marguerite was canonized by Pope John Paul II, becoming the first female saint of Canada. Today, her sisters, the Congregation de Notre Dame, number several thousand and have expanded their work to the United States and Japan, where their schools are widely renowned despite the small Catholic population. St. Marguerite Bourgeoys, pray for us!
       
       
       
      Food for Thought
       
      Unfortunately, sufficient materiel for this section was unable to be obtained.
       
       
      Farewell/Closing
      By: The Editor
       
      First and foremost, I would like to express my gratitude on the topic of TheEfficientBaxter's service with the Dominican Dispatch during her time. As always, our authors are much appreciated, not solely for their work on this issue, but on the presence they maintain in Dominican and their efforts to effectively propagate said House's characteristics via the monthly articles. Lastly, I wish to thank our readers for the time invested in viewing each and every section accommodated herein. 
      Farewell, and may God bless all of you!
    • PinkDonut7
      2 comments
      𝕿𝖍𝖊 𝕱𝖗𝖆𝖓𝖈𝖎𝖘𝖈𝖆𝖓 𝕮𝖍𝖗𝖔𝖓𝖎𝖈𝖑𝖊: 𝕴𝖘𝖘𝖚𝖊 𝐗𝐗𝐈
       
      𝐒𝐩𝐞𝐜𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐀𝐧𝐧𝐨𝐮𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭!
      Greetings, comrades! This month’s newsletter is a bit shorter than usual, so that we can highlight something quite exciting for the future of the Chronicle...
      Since August 11th, 2022, the Chronicle has been our beacon of creativity, collaboration, and teamwork. After 20 superb issues completed so far, it is evident that much has changed within the Franciscan House... and as Franciscan evolves, so must our newsletter! That's why we're excited to announce that we are planning on revamping our beloved newsletter to elevate it to the best it can be! 
      If you’re a Franciscan Member, head over to this topic here where we will be discussing new ideas, new sections and redesigns for future issues. Whether you're a long-time author or a newcomer with several ideas, your feedback and help will be much appreciated! For every viewer reading this (Franciscan or not) your feedback would be extremely helpful for this transformation as well! Please vote in the poll above to indicate your favorite and least favorite sections, so we can have a better idea of what readers enjoy reading the most.
       
      𝕳𝖔𝖚𝖘𝖊 𝕾𝖙𝖆𝖙𝖎𝖘𝖙𝖎𝖈𝖘
      (As of April 11th, 2024.)
      Highest member count: 206 members.
      Current member count: 173 members.
      Current topic count: 420 topics.
      Current post count: 92.8k posts.
      Most popular topic (excluding "Full House Chat"): "Sus chat" with 175.6k views and 36.9k replies.
       
      𝕱𝖗𝖆𝖓𝖈𝖎𝖘𝖈𝖆𝖓 𝕳𝖚𝖒𝖔𝖗𝖔𝖚𝖘 𝕸𝖚𝖘𝖎𝖓𝖌𝖘
      𝕸𝖊𝖒𝖊𝖘
       





       
      Compiled by @Ravenclawed:


       
      𝕱𝖗𝖆𝖓𝖈𝖎𝖘𝖈𝖆𝖓 𝕬𝖉𝖛𝖎𝖈𝖊
      Compiled by @Shaggy
      "A potato a day keeps the Gulag away"  ~ @Isabelle
      "There's nothing humorous about your humerus. Stop laughing." ~ @Bluebell
       
      𝕱𝖗𝖆𝖓𝖈𝖎𝖘𝖈𝖆𝖓 𝕴𝖓𝖙𝖊𝖗𝖛𝖎𝖊𝖜𝖘
      With @Shaggy as interviewer
      Q. 1. If you were trapped on a deserted island, and you could only bring 5 objects with you...What would you bring?
      "A waterbottle, a snack bag (preferably one of those dried crunchy apples), a Bible, a flashlight, and a compass!" ~ @Aqua_Lily
      "Well if there is no restriction on what objects I can bring exactly, then I will bring a sailboat, a compass, a radio, a water filter, and a knife." ~ @the
      Q. 2. What is an interesting fact about you?
      "I once wrote a book in the space of 2 months..." ~ @Aqua_Lily
      "I have triple eyelids." ~ @the
      Q. 3. What is your favorite Ice Cream Flavor?
      "Hmm...I like chocolate chip cookie dough and salted caramel a lot, but as for a classic flavor, then vanilla 😋" ~ @Aqua_Lily
      "Bubblegum." ~ @the
       
      𝕴𝖓 𝕮𝖔𝖓𝖈𝖑𝖚𝖘𝖎𝖔𝖓
      This concludes our April 2024 issue. Don’t forget to vote in the poll above, and maybe even leave a comment to share your feedback if you want to lend a hand in shaping the future of the Chronicle! Thank you for reading and God bless. 
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