Americans celebrate Thanksgiving on Thursday with heightened security measures in place and tensions running high over the conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, potentially casting a shadow over a normally joyous holiday.
War in the Middle East has prompted officials to take extra precautions at airports and shopping malls across the United States and along the route of New York’s signature Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.
Tom Turkey float rides during the 97th Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in Manhattan, New York City, US, on 23rd November, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Brendan McDermid
US President Joe Biden greets Nantucket Fire Department Chief Cranson alongside First Lady Jill Biden, at the Nantucket Fire Department in Nantucket, Massachusetts, US, on 23rd November, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Tom Brenner
BIDEN SHARES PIES FOR THANKSGIVING, EXPRESSES HOPE ABOUT HOSTAGE RELEASE
President Joe Biden delivered pumpkin pies to firefighters on Thursday to celebrate the US Thanksgiving holiday and expressed hope about a pending hostage release in the war between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.
Biden, who is vacationing with his family on the Massachusetts island of Nantucket, has spent part of his time here speaking to foreign leaders about the war.
He told reporters at the fire station that he would not give an update on the hostages until Friday, but said he was keeping his “fingers crossed” that a 3-year-old American girl would be among those released first.
Israel and Hamas will start a four-day truce on Friday, Qatar mediators said, with a group of 13 Israeli women and children being held hostage released later that day.
Biden has a decades-long family tradition of coming to Nantucket for the Thanksgiving holiday.
After he and his wife, first lady Jill Biden, delivered the pies, they returned to the place where they are staying for the trip, a home owned by their friend David Rubenstein, the billionaire co-founder of private equity giant The Carlyle Group.
In earlier remarks on NBC, Biden urged people to focus on solving problems together and stopping rancor in US society.
“Today is about coming together,” said Biden, a Democrat who is running for reelection in 2024 and may face former President Donald Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican nomination.
Asked at the fire station about his message for U.S. citizens Evan Gershkovich and Paul Whelan, who have been detained in Russia, the president said: “We ain’t giving up.”
– JEFF MASON, Nantucket, Massachusetts, Reuters
A quintessential American rite, Thanksgiving brings together family and friends for turkey dinner and watching the parade and American football on TV. It also marks the most intense week of the year for travel and start of the holiday shopping season on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving. Both are seen as indicators for the health of the economy.
But this year the holiday takes place against the backdrop of a war that has provoked a surge in anti-Semitism and Islamophobia in the United States. The FBI has warned Congress that the threat of terrorist attacks are at the highest in nearly a decade.
Reflecting the anxiety, a fiery car crash on a US-Canadian border bridge set off alarm bells on Wednesday before officials announced there was no connection to terrorism.
President Joe Biden urged national unity and “decency” in a phone call with NBC television during coverage of Thursday’s parade.
“Today is about coming together,” Biden said. “We can have different political views but…we should focus on dealing with our problems…And stop the rancor.”
New York Mayor Eric Adams, when asked about protests that may unfold during the parade, told reporters the city respected free-speech rights but would not tolerate any disruption.
“You’re not going to destroy property, you’re not going to injure people,” Adams said on Wednesday.
But a group of about 20 pro-Palestinian protesters did halt the parade for a few minutes after lining across Sixth Avenue. Many of them wore tops emblazoned with “Stop the Genocide” as they unfurled a banner saying “Free Palestine,” “Land Back” and “Genocide Then, Genocide Now.”
Officers led off the protesters, clasped in zip ties. A New York Police Department spokesman declined to comment.
Thanksgiving Day as an official holiday dates to 1863, in the middle of the American Civil War, when President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday of November as a day to give thanks and seek healing.
US schoolchildren learn that the holiday roots trace back to the Pilgrims, who settled in modern-day Massachusetts at Plymouth Rock. In 1620 the newcomers celebrated the autumn harvest with the native Wampanoag people. For many Native Americans, however, Thanksgiving is a day of dark reflection about the genocide that followed.
US President Joe Biden leaves after taking part in the annual ceremony of pardoning the National Thanksgiving Turkeys on the South Lawn at the White House in Washington, US, on 20th November, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Leah Millis/File photo
– With reporting by BRENDAN MCDERMID and JONATHAN ALLEN in New York