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Calendar

2023-2024 School Calendar

Apr
22
Tue
Passover Ends
Apr 22 all-day
Apr
23
Wed
Yoga for Adults! @ Village Montessori Fellowship Hall
Apr 23 @ 4:00 pm – 5:15 pm

COME DO YOGA AT THE VILLAGE!

Our children’s fabulous yoga instructor, Joy DeClerk, will be offering yoga classes for adults — teaching staff, parents, friends from the community, all are welcome! Look for the sign up sheet in our hallway at the Village.

Classes will last for 85 minutes.

AND THEY ARE FREE OF CHARGE!

Apr
26
Sat
Great Cloth Diaper Change!
Apr 26 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm

Village Montessori is a PROUD SPONSOR of the 4th Annual Great Cloth Diaper Change!

Please join us and help promote the use of cloth diapers!

Saturday, April 26 @ 10:00am (actual CHANGE takes place at 10:30am!)

Bernice Garden in SoMa

Event Details from GCDC:

This year’s change will take place in the beautiful SoMa neighborhood at The Bernice Garden. We will have local vendors on site. Our focus this year is to really reach out to the community and involve local businesses as we teach families about the ease of Modern Cloth Diapers. Please spread the word and bring family and friends as we strive to break the Guinness World Book (TM) record on most cloth diapers changed at one time!!

We will be raising money to benefit the Real Diaper Association, please consider donating and/or participating in our silent auction.

Thank you!!

The Little Rock organizing committee

 

 

 

 

Please LIKE the Great Cloth Diaper Change on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/LittleRockGCDC

Apr
28
Mon
Lively Science ~ mammal (maybe a rabbit) @ Village Montessori Primary Class
Apr 28 @ 10:00 am – 10:30 am

The Museum of Discovery’s Lively Science expert, Miss Susan, will bring a critter to share with our students in Miss Courtney’s class. And by share I mean look, listen, smell, and TOUCH!

Apr
30
Wed
Re-enrollment forms due
Apr 30 all-day
May
2
Fri
Yoga for Adults! @ Village Montessori Fellowship Hall
May 2 @ 4:00 pm – 5:15 pm

COME DO YOGA AT THE VILLAGE!

Our children’s fabulous yoga instructor, Joy DeClerk, will be offering yoga classes for adults — teaching staff, parents, friends from the community, all are welcome! Look for the sign up sheet in our hallway at the Village.

Classes will last for 85 minutes.

AND THEY ARE FREE OF CHARGE!

Picnic and a Movie @ Village Montessori/Fellowship Hall
May 2 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm

FREE!
Free MOVIE! Free POPCORN!

Join us on the first Friday of May here at the Village for Picnic and a Movie! Brought to you in partnership with our good friends at Pulaski Heights Presbyterian Church.

First Friday May. 2
Village Montessori
Fellowship Hall
5:30pm
Movie: Lion King

Bring your babies, bring your friends and their babies, bring a blanket and a picnic basket of your family’s favorite snacks and come inside where it’s nice and warm and watch a classic favorite — Lion King — on the big screen together with your family and ours. Our Village. Check it out.

May
5
Mon
Cinco de Mayo
May 5 all-day
Cinco de Mayo (Spanish for “fifth of May”) is a celebration held on May 5. It is celebrated in the United StatesIt is also celebrated in parts of Mexico, primarily in the state of Puebla, where the holiday is called El Día de la Batalla de Puebla (English: The Day of the Battle of Puebla).

It “is a much bigger holiday in the United States” than Mexico, especially in the western and southwestern states. It originated with Mexican-American communities in the American West as a way to commemorate the cause of freedom and democracy during the first years of the American Civil War, and today the date is observed in the United States as a celebration of Mexican heritage and pride.In the state of Puebla, the date is observed to commemorate the Mexican army‘s unlikely victory over French forces at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862, under the leadership of General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín. Cinco de Mayo is not Mexico’s Independence Day—the most important national patriotic holiday in Mexico—which is celebrated on September 16.

Background

1901 poster for Cinco de Mayo: “May 5, 1862 and the siege of Puebla”

Events leading to the Battle of Puebla

Cinco de Mayo has its roots in the French occupation of Mexico, which took place in the aftermath of the Mexican-American War of 1846-48, the Mexican Civil War of 1858, and the 1860 Reform Wars. These wars left the Mexican Treasury nearly bankrupt. On July 17, 1861, Mexican President Benito Juárez issued a moratorium in which all foreign debt payments would be suspended for two years.[14][15] In response, FranceBritain, and Spain sent naval forces toVeracruz to demand reimbursement. Britain and Spain negotiated with Mexico and withdrew, but France, at the time ruled by Napoleon III, decided to use the opportunity to establish a Latin empire in Mexico that would favor French interests, the Second Mexican Empire.

French invasion

Late in 1861, a well-armed French fleet stormed Veracruz, landing a large French force and driving President Juárez and his government into retreat. Moving on from Veracruz towards Mexico City, the French army encountered heavy resistance from the Mexicans close to Puebla, at the Mexican forts of Loreto and Guadalupe. The 8,000-strong French army attacked the much smaller and poorly equipped Mexican army of 4,500. Yet, on May 5, 1862 the Mexicans managed to decisively crush the French army, then considered “the premier army in the world.”

Mexican victory

The victory represented a significant morale boost to the Mexican army and the Mexican people at large. In the description of The History Channel, “Although not a major strategic win in the overall war against the French, Zaragoza’s success at Puebla represented a great symbolic victory for the Mexican government and bolstered the resistance movement.” The description of Time magazine was: “The Puebla victory came to symbolize unity and pride for what seemed like a Mexican David defeating a French Goliath.” It helped establish a much-needed sense of national unity and patriotism.

Events after the battle

The Mexican victory, however, was short-lived. Thirty thousand troops and a full year later, the French were able to defeat the Mexican army, capture Mexico City, and install Emperor Maximilian I as ruler of Mexico. However, the French victory was also short-lived, lasting only three years, from 1864 to 1867. By 1865, “with the American Civil War now over, the U.S. began to provide more political and military assistance to Mexico to expel the French.” Upon the conclusion of the U.S. Civil WarNapoleon III, facing a persistently tenacious Mexican guerilla resistance, the threat of war with Prussia, and “the prospect of a serious scrap with the United States”, retreated from Mexico starting in 1866. The Mexicans recaptured Mexico City, and Maximilian I was apprehended and executed, along with his Mexican generals Miramón and Mejía, in the Cerro de las CampanasQuerétaro. “On June 5, 1867, Benito Juarez finally entered Mexico City where he installed a legitimate government and reorganized his administration.”

Significance

The Battle of Puebla was important for at least two reasons. First, although considerably outnumbered, the Mexicans defeated a much better-equipped French army. “This battle was significant in that the 4,000 Mexican soldiers were greatly outnumbered by the well-equipped French army of 8,000 that had not been defeated for almost 50 years.” Second, since the Battle of Puebla, no country in the Americas has subsequently been invaded by any otherEuropean military force.

Consequences to the United States

Further information: France in the American Civil War

Cinco de Mayo dancers greeted by U.S. President George W. Bush

Some historians have argued that France’s real goal was to help break up the American Union, at the time in the midst of a civil war, by helping the southern Confederacy.

Donald W. Miles states, “At the time, there were fears in the United States that the French would use Mexico as a base to back the Confederacy, so President Lincoln and his Secretary of State went out of their way to appear ‘neutral’ in the Mexican situation. They did not want to take on the French and the Confederates at the same time.” Dr. Miles goes on to explain that “Napoleon III had hesitated to take on the United States directly, but now the news of the Civil War changed everything. ‘ It meant that the Americans would be occupied with their conflict between North and South for some time. Upon hearing the Spaniards and the British had sailed off to grab the customs house in Veracruz to start collecting their duties, Napoleon decided he would not only send the French navy, but would also start looking for someone to place as emperor in Mexico. He would then use Mexico as a base to help the Confederates win their war against the United States. Napoleon saw this as an opportunity not to be missed.

Historian Justo Sierra has written in his Political Evolution of the Mexican People, that had Mexico not defeated the French in Puebla on May 5, 1862, France would have gone to the aid of the South in the U.S. Civil War and the United States’ destiny could have been very different.

Ignacio Gonzalez wrote, “Some scholars, including José Antonio Burciaga, believe that had the French defeated México at Puebla, France would have aided the South in the American Civil War in order to free Southern ports of the Union Blockade. During this time, Confederate General Robert E. Lee was enjoying success, and French intervention could have had an impact on the Civil War.”

Source: wikipedia.com

May
9
Fri
Yoga for Adults! @ Village Montessori Fellowship Hall
May 9 @ 4:00 pm – 5:15 pm

COME DO YOGA AT THE VILLAGE!

Our children’s fabulous yoga instructor, Joy DeClerk, will be offering yoga classes for adults — teaching staff, parents, friends from the community, all are welcome! Look for the sign up sheet in our hallway at the Village.

Classes will last for 85 minutes.

AND THEY ARE FREE OF CHARGE!

May
11
Sun
Mother’s Day
May 11 all-day