Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
28.11.19
27.11.14
Gobble Gobble - Turkey Song - Thanksgiving Animated Video Song
Shake your left hand Gobble
Shake your right hand Gobble
Shake your tail now Gobble Gobble Gobble
Shake your left foot Gobble
Shake your right foot Gobble
Shake your tail now Gobble Gobble Gobble
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble Gobble
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble Gobble
Can I have a beat
Can I move my feet
Can I have a Turkey to eat
It's Thanksgiving
Let's all go in
Where we have a Turkey to eat
There's pumpkin Pie
There's stuffing oh my!
And the people that I love are near!
Shake your left hand Gobble
Shake your right hand Gobble
Shake your tail now Gobble Gobble Gobble
Shake your left foot Gobble
Shake your right foot Gobble
Shake your tail now Gobble Gobble Gobble
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble Gobble
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble the Turkey goes
Gobble Gobble Gobble
28.11.13
22.11.12
24.11.11
Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving Day is celebrated on the fourth Thursday of November in the USA. While perhaps religious in origin, Thanksgiving is now primarily identified as a secular holiday and a time for family reunions.
This cartoon by Cal Grondahl shows a family seated around the table. On the table we can see a roast turkey, the traditional food for Thanksgiving. The father is saying grace, a short prayer said before a eating. (In American Christianity the head of the household often ad libs a special grace on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter while the others observe a moment of silence.) In the cartoon the man is giving thanks for TiVo, a popular make of digital video recorder in the USA.
The first Thanksgiving Story
The story of the first Thanksgiving.
Around 400 years ago, many people in England were unhappy because their king would not let them pray to God as they liked. The king said they must use the same prayers that he did, and if they refused, they were persecuted, imprisoned or even killed.
These English men left their homes and went far off to a country called Holland. In Holland they were happy but they were very poor. And when the children began to grow they became less godlike and did not want to pray anymore. After much talking and thinking, these English people decided to embark on a pilgrimage to the new world. America.
They set out on a small ship called the Mayflower to take them across the sea. There were about 100 people on board the tiny ship. It was crowded, cold and uncomfortable. The sea was rough. They were two months sailing over the Atlantic Ocean. At last the Mayflower came in sight of land.
The month was November and it was cold. There was nothing to be seen but snow, rocks and hard bare ground. They were tired and cold from their long journey, and hungry too. No one had enough food to eat. Many of them became sick and by springtime almost half of the people died.
In spring the sun shone brightly. The snow melted and the leaves and flowers began to emerge. Some friendly Indians have visited the pilgrims during the winter. One of the kind Indians was named Squanto. He stayed with the pilgrims and taught them how to plant their corn, peas, wheat and barley.
The summer came and the days were long and bright. The pilgrim children were very happy in their new home, Plymouth Rock. When it was autumn the fathers gathered the barley, wheat and corn that they had planted and found that it had grown so well that they would have quite enough for a long winter that was coming.
“Let us thank God for it all” they said. Then they decided to have a grand Thanksgiving party and invite the friendly Indians. They prepared wild ducks and geese and great wild turkeys. There was deer meet, bread and cakes. They had fish and clams from the sea nearby. The friendly Indians all came with their chief. They were dressed in deer skins and some of them had the furry coat of a wild cat hanging on their arm. Their long black hair fell loose on their shoulders and was trimmed with feathers or fox tails.
Before they ate, the pilgrims and the Indians thanked God together for all his goodness. And so the story goes of the first Thanksgiving celebrated in Plymouth colony nearly 400 years ago. As you sit down with your friends and family this Thanksgiving, remember this original tale and give thanks for all of Gods abundant blessings.
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