Building a Nation by Giving Thanks
The Thanksgiving
holiday is here again. What will we do? We will get together with family and
friends and will eat a big meal. And what is the meaning of this activity? Well, the quick answer is that this is a
harvest festival; it celebrates the bountiful crops that have been brought in
from the fields during the fall. In other words, we eat to celebrate the
harvest that provided the food being eaten.
If this is so, then
Thanksgiving is little more than the equivalent of the ancient harvest
festivals celebrated three millennia and even longer ago. The ancient
Israelites, for example, celebrated a harvest festival called the Feast of
Booths that is recorded in the earliest portions of the Bible (Exodus 23).
The parallel with
the Feast of Booths suggests that Thanksgiving is not just a harvest festival,
but contains multiple layers of meaning. The description in Leviticus 23:42
links the Feast of Booths to the story of the Israelites’ origins, namely, the
Exodus from Egypt and their sojourn in the wilderness with God. It reads: celebrate the feast “so your
generations may know that I made the people of Israel dwell in booths when I
brought them out of the land of Egypt.”
A second point
appears in the phrase, “that your generations may know.” The scriptural
instructions are designed to help the descendants of the Exodus participants
remember this founding event. Since dwelling in booths is what the Israelites
did when they traveled from Egypt to the land of Israel, the repetition of this
action in the Feast causes the celebrants to recall the origins story. It was
in these years of wandering with God that the Israelites became God’s chosen
people, a nation under God. So the Feast of Booths celebrates not just a
harvest but also reminds the celebrants who they are by recalling their
beginnings as a group.
This theme of unity
was an important feature of the holiday in its early centuries. During the
period of the Israelite tribal confederacy (sometimes known as the Judges
period), roughly 1200-1000 B.C., the Israelites had no all-Israel government.
Each of the tribes had a governing structure, but the only pan-tribal
connection lay in the religion. Festival celebrations such as the Feast of
Booths bound them together as a people.
Our Thanksgiving
holiday functions in the same way. It is
as much a recollection of American origins as it is a harvest festival. Our
annually repeated feast recalls their first feast of thanksgiving. By retelling
the Pilgrim story and recalling that first feast of thanksgiving at our
Thanksgiving time, we remind ourselves of the origins of our nation and our
identity as Americans.
Although
Thanksgiving did not become a legal American holiday until 1941, from Lincoln’s
time onwards US presidents made a proclamation for the celebration of the
holiday every year. In part, this annual
attention to Thanksgiving was due to Sara Josepha Hale, who decided in the
mid-1800s that Thanksgiving should be a national celebration and not just a
local New England feast. Hale edited the
influential women’s magazine Godey’s, a competitor to the Ladies Home Journal,
and every year used her position to write editorials, letters, and feature
articles encouraging the adoption of Thanksgiving.
Over the decades,
increasing numbers of “thanksgivers” joined in the campaign. Originally, Hale’s
conception of the holiday united rural and urban America. Cities and their
populations were increasing and losing touch with the rural life. Hale’s
holiday emphasized plain, wholesome, country food, featuring products native to
America: turkey, squash, potatoes, cranberries, and pumpkin. This
unsophisticated fare reminded city dwellers of farms and the source of their
food, at least once a year.
Following the Civil
War, Thanksgiving was celebrated in both North and South and became a healing
festival that helped unify the post-war nation. As immigration increased in the
1880s and following, it served as a means of integrating the new-comers into
the nation. People whose ancestors may not even have heard of America
identified with the pilgrims and made the story of their new nation into their
own story. So in the end, a simple harvest festival became a vehicle of
national unity.
November 2016
Labels: Chosen nation, Civil War, Feast of Booths, Israel, Sara Josepha Hale, Thanksgiving
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