Here's why Thanksgiving is good for the Jews
This holiday, so quintissentially American, is about gratitude. Never in history have Jews had it as good for as long as they have had in America.
By The Forward and Dennis Prager Tags: Jews in America Israel newsThanksgiving has always been my favorite national holiday. In fact, although I am a religious Jew (or rather, because I am a religious Jew), it rivals my favorite Jewish holidays for my affection.
It does so because it is quintessentially American, it is deeply religious without being denominational and it is based entirely on one of the most important, and noble, traits a human being can have - gratitude.
Gratitude is the foundation of both happiness and goodness. Neither happiness nor goodness is possible without gratitude. If all human beings were grateful, there would be little evil in the world.
It says an immense amount about America and its value system that it long ago began, and later officially enshrined, a national holiday just for the purpose of giving thanks.
It speaks to the centrality of God in American history (something many Jews, being deeply secularized, may not be happy about, but which is nevertheless a fact), and it speaks to the optimistic, happy and goodness-producing spirit that has been at the core of what I and others call Americanism.
American Jews should celebrate Thanksgiving with particular enthusiasm.
First, and most obvious, nowhere in Jewish history have we had it is as good for so long as we have had it in America. No individuals or groups have better reason to celebrate Thanksgiving in America than we Jews.
Second, Thanksgiving is the one day of the year in which we Jews celebrate the same religious holiday with the rest of America. By definition, Jews do not share a religion with the non-Jewish majority of Americans. But we do share our God (the God of Creation and the God of Israel) with the Christian majority. And this holiday alone affirms that.
Third, while all Jewish holidays are family-based, the Christian majority has only two national holidays that are family-centered - i.e., holidays in which a multi-generational meal is expected and for which people travel to be with their family: Christmas and Thanksgiving (the latter is the busiest travel time of the year). Obviously, while Jews may honor their non-Jewish friends' celebrations of Christmas, Jews do not celebrate Christmas. So Jews share with the rest of America only one day a year of a family-based holiday - Thanksgiving. This day therefore joins us with our fellow Americans in a unique way.
True, some ultra-secular Jews may be uncomfortable with the idea of invoking God during the celebration of a national holiday. But even if one is opposed to thanking, or simply cannot thank, God, he should thank fate or luck or his ancestors for moving here, or the founders of this blessed country. Only good can come from having people get together to declare their gratitude as Americans. Indeed, given the overwhelming importance of gratitude in inculcating goodness and happiness in people, Thanksgiving is arguably America's most important day of the year.
On the other end of the religious spectrum, some among the ultra-Orthodox deem it un-Jewish to celebrate a non-Jewish holy day. But a religious Jew who refuses to celebrate Thanksgiving ought not tell anyone - it would most likely constitute a chilul hashem (a desecration of God's name before others). Just imagine how it sounds - "We religious Jews refuse to celebrate a day thanking God for our blessings because non-Jewish Americans celebrate it."
In 1789, George Washington issued the first national Thanksgiving proclamation with these words: "Now, therefore, I do recommend and assign Thursday, the 26th day of November next, to be devoted by the people of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being who is the beneficent author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be..."
What could possibly be un-Jewish about that?
I recall with pride that in my Orthodox parents' home on Thanksgiving we ritually washed our hands before the Thanksgiving meal and sang the Birkat Hamazon - the grace after meals - afterward as if it were a yom tov meal.
Indeed, Thanksgiving is literally a yom tov, a good day. The best there is.
Dennis Prager is a nationally syndicated radio talk show host and columnist. His latest project is the online Prager University, which can be accessed at prageru.com
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Why does Prager accept the wholely fictional Christian storyliine? Does Prager read the critical scholarship that cleary demonstrates the fictional fabrication that Christianity is? The New Testament is a forgery designed to be not history but religious propaganda. In addition the New Testament has 450 anti semitic scenes in only 250 pages. Does Prager beleives in them as well. It is terrible the oppression self censorship fear and cowardice that exists in this world that an Jew can be so terribly pathetic and weak to blinf himself puposely to the truth of the critical scholarship. Jesus NEVER existed!!!
Thanksgiving is indeed a great holiday. It is about Thanking G-d, not about thanking the Indians, or the government for free handouts. Please don't let anyone change that; it's the one and only good thing going for America at the moment... Please don't let the USA turn into an atheist nation
Celebrating Thanksgiving means that one is not only content with his/her lot, but even is grateful for it. The author is right; it is a most American view. I don't see this idea thriving in Israel, a country that never seems to have what it wants, whose ministers insult the President of the United States, that curses its own people who live secular lives in America, that does not understand what gratitude means.
Forget sports or Thanksgiving. I may have seen at least four other intelligent lifeforms that coexist with us all at the same time. There is no such thing as empty space. I'm lucky to have witnessed these things.
You think I am sitting over here stuffing myself full of turkey and sitting down at a Norman Rockwell Thanksgiving Dinner. Nothing of the sort. I had no Turkey today. My Mother's home had no Thanksgiving because someone there is sick with Cancer and my wife is with a Right Wing Christian Sister from Orange County who never talks to me, so I didn't go. I spent most of today sleeping and writing on Haaretz. So anyway, don't envy us. In thirty years the dead will envy the living. I see a World where people over here will be whisked away to foreign labor camps as slaves. They're selling our debt overseas. So I think in the future, people that can't pay their debts will be arrested and sold off as slaves. Maybe even entire families. I've figured that out. So don't envy us that much. It's just a painting.
Easter is the most important family holiday for many Christians, not Christmas.
Amen. A beautifully written piece I would recommend all Jews read at their Thanks Giving diner tonight.