Why I'm grateful despite the history of #ThangsTakenA holiday with troubling origins deserves remembrance, as does a ceasefire and the historic grassroots mobilization that secured it
The colonial origins of Thanksgiving are not usually the first thing that Americans consider when celebrating today’s holiday. But they’re tough to overlook in a year threatening to repeat yet another indigenous genocide, while bearing witness to an accelerating ecocide engineered by Wall Street and the Pentagon. Personally, I struggle with maintaining hope given my dismal view of human nature, institutional cooptation, and the various threats facing the future. While there are plenty of reasons to mourn today’s holiday, however, it also offers a useful reminder to recognize blessings that we might otherwise overlook. First, I’ll offer a few general thoughts on today’s holiday articulated in a previous post. Reasons we might all feel gratitude in 2023Despite the multiple crises confronting our country and our communities, 2023 has witnessed some national milestones that are worth widely celebrating.
Why I feel grateful in 2023...Keep reading with a 7-day free trialSubscribe to Shahid’s Thoughts to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives. A subscription gets you:
|