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Bruce Little Drummer from the Nanticoke tribe performs dance honoring servicemembers during the Delaware National Guard 2nd annual Unity Day, Aug. 10, New Castle, Del. (U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. Lori Bilyou, 101 PAD)
Kumbh really is mystical. I saw some people carrying the sacred water and soil to their homes, just one time in their lives they forgot that even a person of lower caste might have taken a sacred snan in same water. They are fine with this but still they are not cool with talking or even touching same people thinking them to be of lower castes.
In this sense Kumbh really unites people of India irrespective of their caste, creed & color.
13-12-09 Unity Hall restoration.
Removed as not fit for purpose but these radiators are to be preserved.
Built between the years 1905 and 1908 in Oak Park, Illinois, Unity Temple is often considered one of Frank Lloyd Wright's most important structures. Wright's use of a single material, reinforced concrete, and his efficient use of space make Unity Temple one of the first modernist buildings in the world and influenced many future modernist and post-modernists.
The Atom Brick Unity Temple set highlights the total structure and use of casted concrete to create areas of interest on the façade. Builders will gain appreciation for the innovation of a building designed and built over 100 years ago.
The Maryland Military Department celebrated Unity Day, an event designed to enhance cross-cultural awareness and promote harmony, Sept. 23, 2010, at the Fifth Regiment Armory in Baltimore. Unity Day included displays, artifacts, games/activities, food samples from the different groups as well as live music by the Maryland Defense Force Band. (Photo by Spc. Breeanna DuBuke, 29th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)
Unity Chapel dates back to 1766 when two Presbyterian missionaries visited the Latrobe area, which was on the remote frontier region at the time.
They began holding worship services for what became known as the Unity congregation on a farm in the area. In 1774, founder of Pennsylvania William Penn’s grandsons deeded 60 acres to Unity trustees to construct a “meeting house,” where a log church was built. Some of the adjacent land became a burial ground from the frontier settlers.
Unfortunately for that congregation, the log church was destroyed by fire in the winter of 1829-30. Its members then constructed a larger red brick church in 1830. By 1874 though, that building was demolished and replaced by another smaller red brick church which stand here today. The adjacent cemetery is the final resting place to some of the area early settlers. It is also the final resting place of Fred Rogers who was the host of the popular children's TV Program, "Mr. Rogers Neighborhood."