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Thanksgiving

November 19, 2013 | General News | Repairing the World


There was a time, not that long ago, when Thanksgiving opened the season of giving. Now it opens up the season of buying; Black Friday and Cyber Monday now define this time of the year. It is of course wonderful to give and receive gifts to and from friends and relatives. We should be happy as Americans to see consumerism strong in a time where our economy is so challenged. Nonetheless, something is being lost in the shuffle.

We should make Thanksgiving more about philanthropy and volunteerism than shopping and consumerism. This brings Thanksgiving back to its original roots. The Pilgrims based Thanksgiving on the Jewish Holiday of Sukkot (Leviticus 23:33-44). Sukkot is a Jewish harvest festival. The idea of the holiday is to give thanks for a successful agricultural season. The Pilgrims read about Sukkot in the Bible and they felt that it related to their experience of trying to farm and establish a new home for themselves in the America.

Sukkot and by extension Thanksgiving has within it two messages:
1. Giving thanks for what we have.
2. That giving thanks for what we have should raise our conscience to understand that there are many people who have not been blessed with what we have and therefore we have a responsibility to help these people.

There is a way to bring the true message of Thanksgiving back to this holiday.
Here are some suggestions of things you can do around Thanksgiving time:
1. Volunteer at a soup kitchen, homeless shelter or food pantry.
2. Help clean up a park or any place that needs some sprucing up.
4. Hospitals, rehab centers and senior facilities can always use your help.
5. Donate some blood.
6. There are many organizations doing wonderful work that could use your financial help or your time.
There is no end to the lists of kind acts we can come up with. There is so much that is needed in this world. Find the volunteer or charitable experience that is right for you. Perhaps take on a project together with a friend, life partner or with your children.

By each of us volunteering and engaging in philanthropy and volunteerism, we will not only help another person, but we will change ourselves. We will make ourselves more caring and soulful people. This kind of transformation can truly have a ripple effect. In other words, by improving the lives of those we help and impacting our lives by helping, we can truly transform the world. This is the meaning of the central Jewish goal of Tikkun Olam, to repair this very broken world.

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