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� 2001-2006 by Shiloh
times since Oct. 22, 2001
Behind the Scenes of Thanksgiving
11-27-2002 E 12:20 p.m.
Ever wonder how Thanksgiving really started? Or when it became a national holiday that we celebrate every fourth Thursday in November? Despite our popular traditions of turkey and cranberry sauce, Pilgrims and Indians, Thanksgiving in one form or another, started much earlier. And the Pilgrims only held that one feast. Here's what I found out from Care2.com:

Animist tribes believed that plants and animals had spirits which were angered by the harvest. To appease these spirits, tribes would make offerings which often included elaborate festivals. These ceremonies provided the foundation for today's Thanksgiving Day holiday.

In addition, the ancient Greeks, Romans and Hebrews all performed their own festivals to celebrate bountiful harvests. The Greeks honored their goddess of grains, Demeter, during the autumn festival of Thesmosphoria. The Romans made annual offerings to Ceres, the goddess of corn. The Jewish people have been celebrating Sukkoth, the harvest festival, for over 2,000 years.

The American tradition began in 1621 when Massachusetts Bay Governor William Bradford, proclaimed a feast to celebrate a bountiful harvest. The colonists had suffered severe hardships during their first year in the New World, and the successful harvest provided hope that things were improving. According to several documented accounts of this feast, the colonists shared corn, fruits, vegetables and fish with friendly native American tribes who in turn provided fresh venison.

Although this autumnal feast has served as the foundation for later Thanksgiving Day celebrations, the Pilgrims neither called it "Thanksgiving," nor did they repeat the ceremony in future years. In fact, a day of "thanksgiving" would have been spent fasting and praying by these devoutly religious peoples.

So when did the holiday start? Actually, there were various Thanksgiving Day celebrations throughout the early years of colonial USA and Canada. It was George Washington who first declared that all the members of the new Union should celebrate Thanksgiving on the same day, Thursday, November 26, 1789. But, not surprisingly, it was Abraham Lincoln who first declared Thanksgiving as a U.S. national holiday in 1863. America's neighbors, the Canadians, celebrate Thanksgiving on the second Monday in October.

Pretty cool, huh? I thought it was interesting. I kinda wondered about it as I got older because as I found out with Christmas traditions, such as candy canes and mistletoe, there's more to the traditions than the present reveals. But then, I've always enjoyed history.

******

P.S. As it's early yet I may write more later.


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