11-28-19
Thanksgiving has always been my favorite holiday. It is a day focused on food, family and football, without the baggage of religiosity or crass materialism that can sully Christmas. Yet Thanksgiving has a messy history. The first Thanksgiving in 1621 was more a moment of detente between temporary allies, than a celebration of beloved community. Far from being a prelude to the establishment of a new society marked by multicultural democracy, it was the comma before the continuation of a campaign of colonization and genocide, (Source: “The Invention of Thanksgiving,” by Phillip Deloria, The New Yorker, 11/18/19, h/t Marcia Smith).
We have papered over that messy history with a comforting myth, pretending that we have absorbed all of our differences into a beautiful mosaic. We avert our eyes from the violence and subjugation in our history in our pathological need to cling to unearned innocence. Our steadfast refusal to grapple with the truth of our history has brought us to this frightening precipice. Continue reading “Happy Thanksgiving!”