https://amgreatness.com/2019/11/27/thank-the-pilgrims/
I’ve loved the Pilgrims ever since I was a child. They feel like family to me, perhaps because my own father fled religious persecution of the Jews by the Communists in the Soviet Union, and my mother’s grandparents escaped for religious freedom from Czarist Russia. Like the Pilgrims, they embraced America as the Promised Land.
As an adult, I love the Pilgrims in a deeper way the more I learn about them. I cling to them with a fierce loyalty because it was their legacy that set America on the right track, this country I revere and love so much, and for which I am so grateful .
One great and obvious gift the Pilgrims gave us was the lesson in gratitude, with this national holiday of Thanksgiving, that unites the entire country.
If you are curious about the Pilgrims—why they came to America, the steps of their journey, their feelings as they approached our shores that first day, how they survived, what the first Thanksgiving was like—ask a Pilgrim. We have the answer to all these questions directly from Edward Winslow and William Bradford in 1622, two years after they arrived on the Mayflower. Their book, called Mourt’s Relation, is available free on the web. I’ve started a family tradition of reading favorite excerpts on Thanksgiving. It makes the holiday deeply meaningful.
We’re often told that America was founded on secular Enlightenment ideals. That answer gets partial credit. The literal founding of the country was centuries before the Enlightenment happened. It is the Pilgrims who planted our deepest roots. Their legacy is political, ethical and characterological as well as religious. These virtues and institutions are all inextricably linked, then as now. The Puritans and other religious separatists formed the bedrock instincts and institutions that have made this country great and good.
Puritan values and political beliefs did not end as their prosperous children relaxed religious strictures on daily life. The legacy was not diluted, but expanded as other religious groups followed the Pilgrims in coming to America for religious freedom.