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COMPROMISE IS CAUSE FOR THANKS.


Byline: TEREZ ROSE Local View

THANKSGIVING, when you get down to it, is all about tradition. Year after year, we seek out (or avoid) family and familiar recipes, pull out Grandma's china, and strive to create the same meal we've had every year. Turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes n. pl. 1. Potatoes which have been boiled and mashed to a pulpy consistency, usu. with sparing addition of milk, salt, butter, or other flavoring. It is a popular accompaniment to a meat course [U.S., 1900's], providing bulk and calories to a meal. , cranberry cranberry, low creeping evergreen bog plant of the genus Oxycoccus of the family Ericaceae (heath family). Cranberries are considered by some botanists to belong to the blueberry genus Vaccinium.  sauce and pumpkin pie pumpkin pie

traditional dish, especially at Thanksgiving. [Am. Culture: Flexner, 68]

See : America
 -- overeating overeating

eating too much food too quickly; leads to acute gastric dilatation in dogs and horses, acute carbohydrate engorgement in ruminants, dietetic (dietary) diarrhea in young calves and foals, abomasal tympany in bottle fed lambs and calves.
, too, is part of the tradition.

The variables quickly change, however, when you're 6,000 miles from family, unable to return home for the holidays. Then, homesickness is what cramps your stomach. But perhaps this, too, is part of the tradition.

Consider the band of 50 survivors in Plymouth of 1621, who gathered to celebrate their harvest with their newfound new·found  
adj.
Recently discovered: a newfound pastime.

Adj. 1. newfound - newly discovered; "his newfound aggressiveness"; "Hudson pointed his ship down the coast of the newfound sea"
 Native American friends. The Pilgrims-to-be had left extended family and a familiar world behind, and in the course of a year, had lost an alarming 50 percent of their compatriots to sickness.

Now that's a recipe for homesickness.

My first taste of a foreign Thanksgiving came in 1985, when I left my native Kansas for the Peace Corps in Gabon, Central Africa. The early months, amid Gabon's heat, staggering humidity and unfamiliarity, were the hardest. At my provincial post where I taught high-school English, my white skin stuck out like a beacon. Whispers and stares accompanied me everywhere I went. I persevered with a grim determination, teaching, dressing and acting like the American I was.

November brought with it dreams of the upcoming holiday. Back home on the Big Day, Mom would set the table early with linens, her delicate china and fine silverware. The rich smell of slow-roasting turkey would pervade per·vade  
tr.v. per·vad·ed, per·vad·ing, per·vades
To be present throughout; permeate. See Synonyms at charge.



[Latin perv
 the air as family members congregated throughout the day. Laughter would fill the dining room later as ravenous eaters stuffed themselves into a stupor stupor /stu·por/ (stoo´per) [L.]
1. a lowered level of consciousness.

2. in psychiatry, a disorder marked by reduced responsiveness.stu´porous


stu·por
n.
.

Home. So very far away.

The only way to combat the homesickness, I decided, was to host my own traditional Thanksgiving dinner The centerpiece of contemporary Thanksgiving in the United States is a large meal, starring a large roasted turkey. All of the dishes in the traditional American version of Thanksgiving Dinner are made from foods native to North America, according to tradition the Pilgrims received these . My announcement to the other Peace Corps volunteers, however, was met with skepticism.

``Good luck finding the ingredients,'' one said.

``Last year, we just drank beer,'' another offered. ``Trust me -- it's the safest bet.''

Perusing the local store brought only further discouragement. No whole turkeys, only the wings (the good parts went to the U.S.). No fresh vegetables and no potatoes, only local tubers like manioc manioc: see cassava. , taro taro: see arum.
taro

Herbaceous plant (Colocasia esculenta) of the arum family, probably native to Southeast Asia and taken to the Pacific islands.
 and plantains. Not a chance of pumpkin. ``Forget it, then,'' I snapped at my friends. ``No Thanksgiving dinner this year then.''

``But why does it have to be a traditional dinner?'' a Gabonese friend asked.

``Well, that's the point, to do it the way it's always been done, with the turkey and stuffing, mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie.''

``Maybe if you compromised, you'd have better luck,'' he said.

Compromise. That action, so difficult for us to consider -- politically, socially and personally. Why do we resist compromise? Maybe the Pilgrims would have fared better early on had they compromised in myriad ways. Maybe I, too, would fare better in this foreign country if I tried embracing the culture instead of peddling my own.

The Thanksgiving feast I ended up serving was unlike any I'd had before. It included turkey wings, stuffing, mashed taro root and canned French peas. Flour biscuits became dinner rolls. For pumpkin pie, I boiled green papayas from the market, spiced them up with cinnamon and nutmeg nutmeg, name applied to members of the family Myristicaceae. The true nutmeg (Myristica fragrans) is an evergreen tree native to the Moluccas but now cultivated elsewhere in the tropics and to a limited extent in S Florida. , then proceeded with the traditional recipe. The guests, both American and Gabonese, were delighted.

``I've never had turkey wings baked this way before,'' said one Gabonese man. Another reveled in the concept of biscuits with dinner. I thought back to the first Thanksgiving dinner, where the Pilgrims cooked unfamiliar food with familiar recipes. Maybe a Native American invited to the feast tasted a dish and said, ``Hey, I never thought of doing that with corn before.''

When I served the green papaya pie, I watched the other Americans' expression as they took the first bite, trepidation trepidation /trep·i·da·tion/ (trep?i-da´shun)
1. tremor.

2. nervous anxiety and fear.trep´idant


trep·i·da·tion
n.
1. An involuntary trembling or quivering.
 changing to amazement. ``This tastes just like my Mom's pumpkin pie!'' one exclaimed. ``How did you do it?''

Tears stung my eyes and at that moment I felt happier than I'd ever felt in Africa, more fulfilled by Thanksgiving dinner. For the first time, I truly gave thanks: for friends, for bounty, for opportunity. And for my newest lesson: the art of compromise. Not a bad addition to a traditional American celebration.
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Title Annotation:Viewpoint
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Nov 19, 2006
Words:716
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