Two less Chanukah gifts to shop for: A Jewish News gift subscription and the free gift that comes with it. Thanksgiving Every Day Order a Jewish News subscription today and receive an AppleTree gym bag as a FREE gift. ERICA MEYER RAUZIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS L et's say that one of my chil- dren asked me, "Hey, Mom, why isn't there a Jewish Thanksgiving Day." (No one did, unfortunate- ly, because I needed the set up. But, for the purposes at hand, let's pretend.) The question doesn't take so much thought. First of all, Amer- ican Jewry observes the fourth Thursday in November as a na- tional Thanksgiving Day, as set forth by George Washington, ,proclaimed by Abraham Lincoln and decreed by Congress in 1941. (See, that makes it seem like I looked it up, but all my his- torical facts come directly from my daughter's Highlights for Children magazine.) Secondly, to praying Jews of all ranks and files, every day is a day of giving thanks. For instance, the Modim, the prayer of thanksgiving that proclaims "Your miracles are with us everyday," is said morn- ing, afternoon and evening, three times daily. (I did look that up.) Shabbat begins with, "It is -.good to thank God and to sing praises" and ends with thanks in the Havdalah service. Each holiday has messages of gratitude built into its prayers. As time cycles, we express our thanks for the New Year, for for- giveness, for survival in booths in the desert, for the Torah, for the miracle of the Macabees, for the bravery of Esther, for free- from slavery in Egypt, for the loyalty of Ruth, for trees, for Jerusalem, and more. An our festivals are holidays of thanks- giving; they're just not called Thanksgiving. We even have a set of bless- ings for specific events and nat- ural phenomena: lightning, thunder, a rainbow, a comet, the sea, scholars, good news, bad ews, recovery from illness, ex- ceptionally beautiful trees, ex- ceptionally strange animals, and each spring, a new fruit, or two. You'd think we're the most grateful people on earth. But we're not. Like all other human beings, our greatest natural tendency, sometimes even as we stand holding our prayer books and reading words of thanks, is to take things for granted. Perhaps it would be frighten- ing to remain in a constant, quivering state of perpetual gratitude instead of relaxing into our blessings like a warm bath, as if they couldn't all go down the drain in an instant. Perhaps, that is faith. Part of living out our grati- tude is spending our time living. If, each time the children came home from school, I greeted them with, "Thank Heaven, you're home safe and sound, not kidnapped, or murdered, or ad- dicted, or ravaged with disease, or covered with mud," I'd be a nervous wreck and so would they. That doesn't mean that somewhere in my heart I'm not reciting, internally, that exact litany. It just means that the chil- dren coming home from school is normal, not unappreciated, but blessedly routine. Of course, I am deeply grateful that they are well, safe, sane, and more or less clean. Of course, the idea that anything dreadful could happen to them is a terror- inducing nightmare. Of course, we work hard to keep them well and protected. Of course, we know who controls their well being and are grateful, but we are occupied with living our blessings, as well as counting them. Yet, we want to make our gratitude actual, instead of just spoken. Perhaps we must be aware of Heaven's gifts and of our own fragility to truly appre- ciate our blessings and our strength. I wonder if that is the purpose of prayer, and of Thanksgiving Day or days of thanksgiving: to tell us to stop, to sigh, to think about where all these blessings come from, to ap- preciate deeply, to work at sin- cerely climbing all the way up to the level where gratitude takes our breath away. And then to exhale. And move along. ❑ This is a gym bag your child will love. Sturdy red nylon, embossed with The AppleTree family magazine logo, it's a perfect bag for carting around rollerblades, iceskates and more. And, a Jewish News subscription makes a great gift too, for yourself, friends, or relatives. It's a yearlong gift that opens up into a weekly surprise of exclusive features, up-to-the- minute news and in-depth stories. Plus, every month our new family magazine, The AppleTree is inserted inside. This Chanukah, figuring out what to get the kids - or grandkids - is as easy as ordering a Jewish News subscription. To order a Jewish News subscription for yourself or as a gift, and receive a free gym bag, call (810) 354-6620 or return the coupon below. ❑ ce Q, C) 0 YES! Receive 52 issues of jewi‘ News, inciuoing 12 issues of The AppieTreei for o}4 $46 ($63 out of state) ano with or paid subscription, a FREE AppleTree Gym Bag. ❑ Please Bill Me. ❑ Payment Enclosed. Charge my: ❑ VISA ❑ MasterCard Card # ❑ I'd like to send a subscription as a gift to: Gittcard Message: Exp. Date Name F - a. 0 en Address Signature (required) City My Name State Zip Phone My Address Gift Card Message: City State Zip CO CT) Send AppleTree Gym Bag To: Phone ❑ Me Nov siZscribers oniN ❑ Recipient DATI LO 3-- CC Ill CO Please send all payments with this coupon to: re HELPING JWISH FA.1ILIE5 GROW LLJ THE JEWISH NEWS • P.O. Box 2267 • Southfield, MI 48037-2267. Allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. 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