Thanksgiving is a year-round practice of giving thanks (2024)

Aquinnah Wampanoags on the island of Martha's Vineyard turn their attention to gathering wild cranberries during Cranberry Thanksgiving. Tom Verde hide caption

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Tom Verde

Aquinnah Wampanoags on the island of Martha's Vineyard turn their attention to gathering wild cranberries during Cranberry Thanksgiving.

Tom Verde

When the Pilgrims sat down to what some regard as the first Thanksgiving 400 years ago in what is today Plymouth, Mass., they hardly had the market cornered on giving thanks. For local Wampanoags, and Indigenous people throughout North America, gathering to give thanks was already a familiar custom, taking place not just annually, but 13 times throughout the lunar, calendar year — a cycle known as the Thirteen Moons or Thirteen Thanksgivings.

"Thanksgivings are a big part of our culture. Giving thanks is how we pray," says Kerri Helme, a Mashpee Wampanoag whose tribal ancestors were the first to engage with Plymouth's Pilgrims when they arrived. These cyclical celebrations welcome the summer's first strawberries, the first green beans, the tapping of maple trees, the month of storytelling during the depths of winter, and more.

Schemitzun, also known as the Green Corn Festival, is a celebration of the corn harvest at the end of August.

Thanksgiving is a year-round practice of giving thanks (3)

Mashpee Wampanoag Kerri Helme makes traditional children's dolls during the August Green Corn Festival at Mashantucket in southeastern Connecticut. Tom Verde hide caption

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Tom Verde

"We view Green Corn as a homecoming. It's really an opportunity for everyone to see each other," says Helme, who celebrated Schemitzun at Mashantucket in southeastern Connecticut, home to the Mashantucket (Western) Pequot Tribal Nation. The two-day festival of dancing, chanting, and feasting is one of the largest Indigenous gatherings, or pow wows, in the Northeast.

In October, after the corn fields have browned and withered, Aquinnah Wampanoags on the island of Martha's Vineyard turn their attention to gathering wild cranberries during Cranberry Thanksgiving, a day, like Schemitzun, of ceremony, feasting and song.

Young and old fan out across tribal bogs to gather the tart, crimson berries. While they appear at least annually on many American dinner tables, tribal elder Julianne Vanderhoop says the Aquinnah cherish cranberries throughout the winter as a source of nutrition.

"Cranberries were mixed into everything, from fritters to vegetables. They're dried and held in the root cellar over the winter. So this was a primary sustenance crop for us" says Vanderhoop.

So sacred is Cranberry Thanksgiving that Aquinnah children are officially given the day off from school to join the harvest.

Come November, when temperatures drop, the focus shifts from harvesting to hunting during Hunters Moon, the next celebration in the cycle.

"That moon is an important time for us," says Cassius Spears Jr. first councilman of the Narragansett tribe in Rhode Island.

"We talk to the four leggeds and we ask for them to help us get through the winter and that's when we go out and we hunt. That's a time of thanks, a time of appreciation because [animals] are giving their lives so we can live," says Spears.

Thanksgiving is a year-round practice of giving thanks (4)

The Green Corn Festival in celebration of the corn harvest at the end of August. Tom Verde hide caption

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Tom Verde

But in recent decades wildlife, habitat and the cycle of the Thirteen Moons themselves face threats, Spears says, from climate change.

"If the strawberries aren't growing, how are you going to have a strawberry thanksgiving? If the green corn is stunted because of drought and it's not ready for harvest, or the quantity isn't there at the end of the season, how are we able to do our ceremonies?" he asks.

In answer to his own questions, Spears says Indigenous people will find ways to endure, as they always have, just as day follows night.

"We give thanks every day when the sun rises, or the sun sets, we give thanks. So it's something that we do. It's a part of who we are, which is far, far removed from American Thanksgiving and football and turkey and getting mad at your family" he says, wryly.

Expressing gratitude thirteen times a year, Spears concludes, not only shows respect for the earth, but keeps Indigenous people in close touch with the cycles of creation's blessings.

Thanksgiving is a year-round practice of giving thanks (2024)

FAQs

Why is Thanksgiving important? ›

Celebrated on the fourth Thursday in November, Thanksgiving traces its origins to harvest festivals. It was customary to express gratitude for a bountiful harvest in the cultures of both the Pilgrims who sailed from England in 1620 and the Native Americans they encountered.

What is the meaning behind Thanksgiving? ›

Colonists in New England and Canada regularly observed “thanksgivings,” days of prayer for such blessings as safe journeys, military victories, or abundant harvests. Americans model their holiday on a 1621 harvest feast shared between the Wampanoag people and the English colonists known as Pilgrims.

How long did the first Thanksgiving last? ›

Together, the Plymouth colonists and the Wampanoag visitors “entertained and feasted” for three days. Since he didn't think it was important, Winslow kept his version of the event brief. He never used the word “thanksgiving.”2 We are left to wonder what the participants thought of it.

What season is Thanksgiving in? ›

Various similarly named harvest festival holidays occur throughout the world during autumn. Although Thanksgiving has historical roots in religious and cultural traditions, it has long been celebrated as a secular holiday as well.

What is the main message of Thanksgiving? ›

It is perceived as an act of worship, expressing gratitude for all things as part of God's provision, often with the sentiment “God bless”. Thanksgiving has both historical and spiritual origins in Christianity, emphasizing appreciation and adoration for God, who is the source of every good and perfect gift.

What is the literal meaning of Thanksgiving? ›

The word “thanksgiving” dates back to the 1530s and is formed by combining the noun “thanks” with the verb “giving.” “Thanks” is taken from the Old English “panc,” meaning grateful thought. “Giving” comes from the Old English “giefan,” or to bestow or grant.

What are 5 interesting facts about Thanksgiving? ›

Thanksgiving history facts
  • Thanksgiving dates back to 1621. ...
  • The first Thanksgiving feast was three days long. ...
  • Thanksgiving became a holiday in 1863. ...
  • For Native Americans, it's a day of quiet reflection and prayer. ...
  • 293.3 million people will eat turkey this Thanksgiving. ...
  • Thanksgiving football was initially a college tradition.
Nov 23, 2023

What is the true story of Thanksgiving? ›

As the story goes, friendly Native Americans taught the struggling colonists how to survive in what the Europeans called the New World. Then everyone got together to celebrate with a feast in 1621. Thanksgiving 2022 would mark the 401st anniversary of that "first" American Thanksgiving.

How many natives were killed on Thanksgiving? ›

Several times this happened because of the massacres of Native people, including in 1637 when Massachusetts Colony Governor John Winthrop declared a day of thanksgiving after volunteers murdered 700 Pequot people.

What is Thanksgiving to God? ›

According to Strong's definitions, the Hebrew word thanksgiving is tôwdâh (to-daw') and it means confession, praise, and offering. When we give thanks in the truest sense of the biblical word, we offer God our praises and acknowledge to Him that He is the Giver of all good gifts.

Why do people love Thanksgiving? ›

Thanksgiving (and all the food, family, and traditions that come with it) gives us the opportunity to pause our lives for a day to reflect on everything we're thankful for, surrounded by the people who matter most.

What president made Thanksgiving a holiday? ›

President Abraham Lincoln had declared Thanksgiving a national holiday on the last Thursday in November in 1863 and tradition dictated that it be celebrated on the last Thursday of that month.

Why is Happy Thanksgiving important? ›

Thanksgiving is important because it's a positive and secular holiday where we celebrate gratitude, something that we don't do enough of these days. It's also a celebration of the fall harvest.

Why is it important to give thanks to people? ›

A study conducted at the Institute of HeartMath Research Center in California found that positive emotions like appreciation significantly lowered levels of cortisol. Being thankful helps you bond. Research by U.S. psychologists Sara Algoe and Baldwin Way indicates that gratitude also can lead to better relationships.

Why is Thanksgiving so powerful? ›

Thanksgiving is truly the most important of American holidays because, more than even Christmas or the Fourth of July, it is a time when American families reunite, express gratitude for one another, and feel closer to one another than at any other time.

What does the Bible say about Thanksgiving? ›

1 Timothy 4:4-5: "For everything God created is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is received with thanksgiving, because it is consecrated by the word of God and prayer."

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