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Thanksgiving 2012: A Meditation on Giving Thanks and Other Miscellania

This was a post first published in my private blog on Thursday, November 26, 2009, three years ago on this day of Thanksgiving.  It is with great fondness that I reproduce it here again today.  Simply titled, ‘To Rachel’ it is a tribute to my late friend, and an affirmation to my love of a day that is set aside to give thanks for the many blessings and bounties of life.


Five years ago, around this time of year, my friend Rachel and I went out to have lunch at the new Zingerman’s restaurant that had opened at the corner of Maple and Stadium. Rachel Persico, my friend and colleague from work was her talkative and cynical self. Cynical because that was her style, her way, her approach to life.

I suppose she had reason to be cynical– or anything she might want to be– given that she had quite the extraordinary story about her childhood and personal circumstances. She would tell about how her family in Poland had survived the Nazi concentration camps before they eventually found their way to the newly founded nation-state of Israel in 1948. As a child at the time, she was raised in a kibbutz, and later as a young woman, she met and married a displaced and dispossessed Arab Palestinian and emigrated to the States. They made their home in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where Antone held a faculty appointment in the Department of Middle Eastern Studies, and Rachel, with her background as a social-worker and counselor, became a Student Advisor at the International Center.

Well, on that day when we went out to lunch, Rachel was waxing eloquent about the uselessness of the Thanksgiving holiday. Was it not a celebration of the massacre, domination, and eventual elimination of the native-American folk by the white invaders across the ocean? Rachel didn’t wish to see anything more to this unique American tradition, and I wasn’t particularly inclined to get into a heated exchange over our soup and salad. And so, I sat back and smiled, and made a few small sounds of dissent every now and then, but for the most part, I let her tell me just how silly and useless all the fuss was about. She knew I wasn’t buying it, but both she and I didn’t care about that, choosing only to focus on the fact that we were happy to be able to agree to disagree over a nice lunch in a nice place!

I didn’t buy it then, and I don’t buy it now– this whole argument about the supposed real purpose of the first Thanksgiving– and here’s why: regardless of the unassailable facts surrounding the occupation and inhabitation of the New World, I choose to believe that the first Pilgrims (Puritans fleeing religious discrimination in their motherland, England) truly wished to offer thanksgiving to God for the fruits of their first labors. The bounty of food and fellowship was surely worthy of giving thanks. 

Giving thanks, once a year, to God and to each other, for all the good things that we have received. What a concept! Simple, yet so powerful.

So, today, on Thanksgiving Day, this exclusively American holiday, for the record, I wish to state that I am unashamedly a fan of this tradition. It is the most unpretentious– and dare I say it– least commercialized holiday whose focus is still, putting everything on hold for one day– shutting down all work and business– so as to make a nice meal and share it with the ones you love.  Sometimes, they might not be so loving, and you might not even care for their company (all those horror stories of insufferable aunts, uncles, cousins, and the like are probably all true!), but the very act of coming together and putting aside differences for a while is a laudable event.

My dear friend Rachel died three years later– almost close to the day that we went out to lunch. Today, on Thanksgiving, I cherish the memory of that time, as well as all the other good times we had. Thank you, Rachel, for your friendship, and for being you. Here’s to you, today. RIP.

P.S. Rachel also loved ABBA, the band. One of her favorite songs was Waterloo. Rachel faced her Waterloo with her cancer that finally won.  These are some of the lyrics from that song:

Waterloo – I was defeated, you won the war
Waterloo – promise to love you for ever more
Waterloo – couldn’t escape if I wanted to
Waterloo – knowing my fate is to be with you
Waterloo – finally facing my Waterloo

My my, I tried to hold you back but you were stronger
Oh yeah, and now it seems my only chance is giving up the fight
And how could I ever refuse
I feel like I win when I lose

———–

Here’s a picture of my Thanksgiving table today.  I have too much to be thankful for, but that doesn’t deter me from counting my blessings. 

Thanksgiving_2012_046

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On This Day: November 21

Updated November 20, 2012, 1:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On Nov. 21, 1964 New York’s Verrazano Narrows Bridge opened.

Go to article »

On Nov. 21, 1904, Coleman Hawkins, the pioneering American jazz saxophonist, was born. Following his death on May 19, 1969, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1789 North Carolina became the 12th state to ratify the U.S. Constitution.
1922 Rebecca L. Felton of Georgia was sworn in as the first woman to serve in the U.S. Senate.
1969 The Senate voted down the Supreme Court nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth.
1973 President Richard Nixon’s attorney, J. Fred Buzhardt, revealed the existence of an 18 1/2-minute gap in one of the White House tape recordings related to Watergate.
1980 A fire at the MGM Grand Hotel-Casino in Las Vegas killed 87 people.
1985 Former U.S. Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Jay Pollard was arrested, accused of spying for Israel. (He later pleaded guilty and is serving a life sentence.)
1989 The proceedings of Britain’s House of Commons were televised live for the first time.
1991 The U.N. Security Council chose Boutros Boutros-Ghali of Egypt to be secretary-general.
1995 The Dow Jones industrial average closed above 5,000 for the first time.
2000 The Florida Supreme Court granted Democrat Al Gore’s request to keep the presidential election recount going.
2001 A 94-year-old Connecticut woman died of inhalation anthrax, the last of five people killed in the anthrax attacks.
2002 NATO invited seven former communist countries to join the alliance: Slovenia, Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Bulgaria.
2004 The NBA suspended Indiana’s Ron Artest for the rest of the season following a brawl in the stands during a game against the Detroit Pistons.
2005 Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon broke away from the hardline Likud with the intention of forming a new party.
2007 Officials announced the recall of more than a half-million pieces of Chinese-made children’s jewelry contaminated with lead.
2010 Debt-struck Ireland applied for a massive EU-IMF loan to stem the flight of capital from its banks.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Dr. John, Musician

Musician Dr. John turns 72 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

Tina Brown, Journalist, editor

Journalist-editor Tina Brown turns 59 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

1920 Stan Musial, Baseball Hall of Famer, turns 92
1937 Marlo Thomas, Actress (“That Girl”), turns 75
1944 Richard Durbin, U.S. senator, D-Ill., turns 68
1944 Earl Monroe, Basketball Hall of Famer, turns 68
1944 Harold Ramis, Writer, actor, turns 68
1945 Goldie Hawn, Actress, turns 67
1950 Livingston Taylor, Singer, turns 62
1952 Lorna Luft, Actress, turns 60
1956 Cherry Jones, Actress, turns 56
1963 Nicollette Sheridan, Actress (“Desperate Housewives”), turns 49
1965 Bjork, Rock singer, actress, turns 47
1966 Troy Aikman, Football Hall of Famer, sportscaster, turns 46
1969 Ken Griffey Jr., Baseball player, turns 43
1971 Michael Strahan, Football player, talk show host, turns 41
1984 Jena Malone, Actress, turns 28
1985 Carly Rae Jepsen, Singer, turns 27

 

Historic Birthdays

Coleman Hawkins 11/21/1904 – 5/19/1969 American jazz musician.Go to obituary »
83 Francois Voltaire 11/21/1694 – 5/30/1778
French writer
67 William Beaumont 11/21/1785 – 4/25/1853
American army surgeon
77 Sir Samuel Cunard 11/21/1787 – 4/28/1865
British shipbuilder
80 Hetty Green 11/21/1834 – 7/3/1916
American financier
81 Sir Harold Nicolson 11/21/1886 – 5/1/1968
English author and diplomat
68 Rene Magritte 11/21/1898 – 8/15/1967
Belgian painter
69 Eleanor Powell 11/21/1912 – 2/11/1982
American dancer
81 Sid Luckman 11/21/1916 – 7/5/1998
American football coach