When a student's baby started crying in class, she stood up to leave. But the professor stopped her and held her child while he taught so she could focus on the class.

This Turkish bride and groom spent their wedding day (after the ceremony) feeding 4000 refugees
https://t.co/LiUSbGgK4l
An entire neighborhood secretly learned sign language to surprise their deaf neighbor
This security guard at Disneyland would ask every little princess for their autograph. This one reportedly told her parents that she was thrilled he thought she was a "real princess"
This man put a washer and dryer in a van so homeless people could wash their clothes for free
The father of the bride took her stepfather by the hand so he could walk her down the aisle as well.
https://t.co/WOOST9NpWE
Hungarians leaving shoes at the train station in Budapest for arriving immigrants
Literally gave a homeless man the shirt off his back
https://t.co/lzTiRtjkUk
This man saved a kitten in a flood
Apparently, teddy bears are often used in wildlife rehabilitation
Seen in a taxi
https://t.co/qoNOqPstc3
This is true
There's no rule that says you can't take a hedgehog shopping. No rule anyone would enforce, anyway

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First thread of the year because I have time during MCO. As requested, a thread on the gods and spirits of Malay folk religion. Some are indigenous, some are of Indian origin, some have Islamic


Before I begin, it might be worth explaining the Malay conception of the spirit world. At its deepest level, Malay religious belief is animist. All living beings and even certain objects are said to have a soul. Natural phenomena are either controlled by or personified as spirits

Although these beings had to be respected, not all of them were powerful enough to be considered gods. Offerings would be made to the spirits that had greater influence on human life. Spells and incantations would invoke their


Two known examples of such elemental spirits that had god-like status are Raja Angin (king of the wind) and Mambang Tali Arus (spirit of river currents). There were undoubtedly many more which have been lost to time

Contact with ancient India brought the influence of Hinduism and Buddhism to SEA. What we now call Hinduism similarly developed in India out of native animism and the more formal Vedic tradition. This can be seen in the multitude of sacred animals and location-specific Hindu gods