1917: The Russian Revolution Begins
Historical Record
On March 8, 1917 (February 23 on the old Julian calendar), the Russian Revolution began when thousands of women textile workers in Petrograd took to the streets to protest food shortages and the devastating human cost of World War I โ a day that happened to coincide with International Women's Day. Their strikes and marches rapidly drew in hundreds of thousands of workers, soldiers, and citizens, and within days had grown into an unstoppable revolution that forced the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II and ended three centuries of Romanov rule.
The February Revolution, as it became known, set in motion the chain of events that led to the Bolshevik October Revolution eight months later, the birth of the Soviet Union, and one of the most consequential political experiments in human history โ with consequences that continue to echo in today's Russia under Vladimir Putin, in the ongoing war in Ukraine, and in the broader struggle between democratic and authoritarian governance models that defines so much of the current global political contest. It is perhaps fitting that a revolution ignited by women protesting for basic dignity and survival should be remembered on International Women's Day.
Source: Historical Record / Library of Congress Russian Revolution Archives
1979: The Camp David Peace Between Egypt and Israel
Historical Record
In the week of March 1979, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin signed the Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty in Washington, formalising the peace agreement that had been negotiated at Camp David under the mediation of U.S. President Jimmy Carter the previous September. The treaty made Egypt the first Arab nation to recognise the State of Israel โ a landmark in Middle Eastern diplomacy that earned Sadat and Begin the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize, and that ultimately cost Sadat his life when he was assassinated by Islamic extremists in 1981.
The Camp David Accords represented a high-water mark for American diplomacy in the Middle East โ patient, painstaking, and grounded in a genuine belief that conflict between nations with real grievances could be resolved through negotiation if the political will existed on all sides. The contrast with the current moment, in which U.S.-Israeli military strikes have shattered the remnants of the regional order and drawn the Middle East into its most dangerous crisis in decades, is difficult to contemplate without a certain historical vertigo. Carter's approach and Trump's approach represent, in some meaningful sense, opposite poles of American engagement with the world's most combustible region.
Source: National Archives and Records Administration / Carter Presidential Library
2011: Japan's Triple Disaster โ Earthquake, Tsunami, Fukushima
Historical Record
On March 11, 2011 โ just days from today โ one of the most powerful earthquakes ever recorded struck Japan's northeastern Tลhoku region, generating a massive tsunami that swept over coastal communities with devastating speed, killing nearly 16,000 people and triggering the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant. The triple disaster โ earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown โ tested Japan's infrastructure, emergency management systems, and national resilience in ways that left permanent marks on the country's governance, energy policy, and cultural consciousness.
Fifteen years on, the Fukushima region continues its long and painstaking process of recovery and decommissioning, with the management of radioactively contaminated groundwater and the eventual safe storage of nuclear fuel debris remaining complex and unresolved engineering challenges. Japan's decision in 2023 to release treated water from the Fukushima plant into the Pacific Ocean triggered diplomatic tensions with China and South Korea, demonstrating how the disaster's consequences extend far beyond Japan's borders and far beyond the immediate aftermath of March 2011.
The anniversary of 3/11, as it is known in Japan, is an occasion for national remembrance, reflection on disaster preparedness, and renewed commitment to the communities still living with displacement, trauma, and uncertainty. In an era of accelerating climate risk and renewed nuclear energy discussions globally, the Fukushima disaster retains powerful contemporary relevance as a warning about the intersection of natural hazards, technological systems, and the limits of human preparation.
Source: Japanese Government Archives / IAEA Fukushima Daiichi Review Mission Reports