Nearly every culture has a ritual for
giving thanks for life and blessings. We celebrate thanksgiving in the Fall of
the year particularly because of the abundant harvest the Summer months have provided.
In the United States, this celebration has taken on a mantel of national enormity
but where has this holiday come from?
One Blessing |
In most religions, thanksgiving is a
spiritual recognition of the blessings bestowed upon the faithful, again
usually around the time of the harvest. In ancient times, people made sacrifices
of living creatures and this practice is still in evidence today with turkeys,
lambs, goats. In religious establishments, there are formal offerings, services
of appreciation, shared meals to celebrate the bounty of the earth.
Two Blessings |
And a fourth! |
This story may be true in its essence but
it isn’t the origin of Thanksgiving as we know and celebrate it today. (Let’s
assume we’re not talking about the folks who’ve formed tent-communities outside
mega-stores in lieu of having a meal with their families.) The Pilgrims were
most probably celebrating the religious thanksgiving, toward the middle of
October with a religious service and a long sermon, rather than the more pagan
celebration of life and all the bacchanalia surrounding a day of feasting,
football and family feuds.
Thanksgiving began its journey to becoming
National Holiday only in the 1860s, during the American Civil War. The author,
Sarah Josepha Hale, promoted the idea of a national day of thanksgiving to politicians
for over forty years. At the time, a day of thanksgiving varied from state to
state. A few months after the Battle of Gettysburg in July 1863, in part as an
attempt to unify the northern and southern states, Lincoln declared a national
day of thanksgiving for the last Thursday of November in that year.
For seventy five years, subsequent
Presidents kept the tradition by declaring a national day from year to year but
it wasn’t until December 26, 1941 that Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed into law that Thanksgiving became fixed on the fourth
Thursday of November by federal legislation. For nearly 400 years, people
living on this continent have celebrated their good fortune and the blessings
bestowed upon them through the observance, religious and secular, of a day of
feasting.
This is one of my favorite holidays and it seemed only natural to include it as a pivotal point in my Avalon Romance, Wait a Lonely Lifetime. I sincerely hope your day of thanksgiving
was exactly that and may we continue to celebrate in the way that most
fittingly shows our gratitude for our many blessings.
3 comments:
What a wonderful, informative post! Thanks, Leigh. Your blessings are adorable.
Yet again, it's a woman behind the scenes hoping to mend a war-torn country that creates a holiday (Mother's Day is a similar scenario). I hope everyone had a wonderful holiday, filled with the warmth of those they love!
Great post. I enjoyed it and am extending a late Happy Thanksgiving wish to you.
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