Monday, January 28, 2008

We celebrate the Birthday of Juan Pablo Duarte tradition of the Dominican Republic.

With the clamor of his poems, drama enacting the fight for the Dominican Republic is a homeland free from any foreign power and other cultural events, public schools and private schools started this Friday the celebration of the birth of the patrician Juan Pablo Duarte.

With a bright sun and burning reflected in the bust of the patrician students danced to the rhythm of the Dominican folklore staged the struggle for independence and even younger recited stanzas of his best-known verses.

Juan Pablo Duarte himself felt to be the father of his country and acted as such, both by the selfless way they behaved as their way of thinking, then said: "work for the motherland and that is to work for our children and ourselves.” But also, as a good father, he said, in message to the people of Puerto Plata: "with the satisfaction of seeing, which you desire, free, happy, independent and peaceful, and in perfect unity and harmony"…

Students stood tricolor flag in his coat bearing the emblem God, Homeland and Freedom. The colleges and schools met at the Columbus Lighthouse and then marched toward the Amphitheatre. And so, as the people they belong to have paid tribute to the Father of the Nation, among these can be identified: colleges Sosua, Cabarete, Puerto Plata and many others of our North Coast, leading to fully respect this tradition.

The patrician Juan Pablo Duarte was born 195 years ago, on January 26, 1813, in the city of Santo Domingo. He was the son of Juan Jose Duarte, a businessman born in Spanish Vejer de la Frontera, Cadiz province (Spain) and Manuela Ten and Jimenez, a native of El Seibo, Dominican Republic, in turn, father and Spanish mother seibana. There is a Dominican who does not have a referral from Duarte, a positive reference; we all know that he is the Father of the Nation.

No comments: