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Thanksgiving
Day(感恩节)
Fourth Thursday in November
加入时间:05年9月12日19:34
Almost
every culture in the world has held celebrations of thanks for a plentiful
harvest. The American Thanksgiving holiday began as a feast of
thanksgiving in the early days of the American colonies almost four
hundred years ago.
In 1620, a boat filled with more than one hundred people sailed across the
Atlantic Ocean to settle in the New World(新大陆). This religious
group had begun to question the beliefs of the Church of England and they
wanted to separate from it. The Pilgrims settled in what is now the state
of Massachusetts. Their first winter in the New World was difficult. They
had arrived too late to grow many crops, and without fresh food, half the
colony died from disease. The following spring the Iroquois Indians(美国纽约州东北部易洛魁族印第安人)taught
them how to grow corn, a new food for the colonists. They showed them
other crops to grow in the unfamiliar soil and how to hunt and fish.
In the autumn of 1621, bountiful crops of corn, barley(大麦),
beans and pumpkins were harvested. The colonists had much to be thankful
for, so a feast was planned. They invited the local Indian chief and 90
Indians. The Indians brought deer to roast with the turkeys and other wild
game offered by the colonists. The colonists had learned how to cook
cranberries and different kinds of corn and squash dishes from the
Indians. To this first Thanksgiving, the Indians had even brought popcorn.
In following years, many of the original colonists celebrated the
autumn harvest with a feast of thanks.
After the United States became an independent country, Congress
recommended one yearly day of thanksgiving for the whole nation to
celebrate. George Washington suggested the date November 26 as
Thanksgiving Day. Then in 1863, at the end of a long and bloody civil war,
Abraham Lincoln asked all Americans to set aside the last Thursday in
November as a day of thanksgiving.
Thanksgiving falls on the fourth Thursday of November, a different date
every year. The President must proclaim that date as the official
celebration.
Thanksgiving is a time for tradition and sharing. Even if they live far
away, family members gather for a reunion at the house of an older
relative. All give thanks together for the good things that they have.
In this spirit of sharing, civic groups and charitable organizations
offer a traditional meal to those in need, particularly the homeless. On
most tables throughout the United States, foods eaten at the first
thanksgiving have become traditional.
Symbols of Thanksgiving
Turkey, corn, pumpkins and cranberry sauce(酸果曼沙司)are
symbols which represent the first Thanksgiving. Now all of these symbols
are drawn on holiday decorations and greeting cards. The use of corn meant
the survival of the colonies. "Indian corn" as a table or door
decoration represents the harvest and the fall season.
Sweet-sour cranberry sauce, or cranberry jelly, was on the first
Thanksgiving table and is still served today. The cranberry is a small,
sour berry. It grows in bogs(沼泽), or muddy areas, in Massachusetts
and other New England states. The Indians used the fruit to treat
infections. They used the juice to dye their rugs and blankets. They
taught the colonists how to cook the berries with sweetener(甜味佐料)and
water to make a sauce. The Indians called it "ibimi" which means
"bitter berry." When the colonists saw it, they named it
"crane-berry" because the flowers of the berry bent the stalk
over, and it resembled the long-necked bird called a crane. The berries
are still grown in New England.
In 1988, a Thanksgiving ceremony of a different kind took place at the
Cathedral of St. John the Divine. More than four thousand people gathered
on Thanksgiving night. Among them were Native Americans representing
tribes from all over the country and descendants of people whose ancestors
had migrated to the New World.
The ceremony was a public acknowledgment of the Indians' role in the
first Thanksgiving 350 years ago. Until recently most schoolchildren
believed that the Pilgrims cooked the entire Thanksgiving feast, and
offered it to the Indians. In fact, the feast was planned to thank the
Indians for teaching them how to cook those foods. Without the Indians,
the first settlers would not have survived.
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