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Publication time:2020-11-26     Reading times:     Font:【bigmediumsmall

On this rainy, cold yet warm day, we welcome the annual Thanksgiving. On the journey of wind and rain, the Yizhu family witnesses the growth, progress, and development of the company together.

Always hold a grateful heart! Gratitude to society is the opportunity and environment that society has given us for survival and development; Thank you to our customers for choosing Yizhu Agriculture and Animal Husbandry Co., Ltd. It is you who helped us expand our market and provide us with business; It was your timely feedback on market information that enabled our products to successfully win the market during the upgrade and replacement process; Thanks to the efforts and proactive creativity of our family, our company has become a leader in the industry.

We deeply understand that the development and growth of our company cannot be separated from the attention of society, customer trust, support and participation, and the efforts and dedication of our employees. We are honored to have established partnerships with respected clients to achieve mutual benefit and common development.

While expressing gratitude to society and customers, Yizhu also prepared gifts for his family to thank them for their contributions to the company.

In the future, Yizhu family members will work together and continuously explore and forge ahead, relying on high-quality products, good reputation, and thoughtful service to provide broader development space for our customers and friends!

Happy Thanksgiving Day

Extended Reading

The Origin of Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving Day is an ancient holiday created by the American people, and it is also a holiday for American families to get together. Therefore, Americans always feel warm when they mention Thanksgiving Day. Thanksgiving is the most authentic and American style holiday among national holidays in the United States, and it is most closely related to early American history. Originating from early immigrants in Plymouth, Massachusetts. These immigrants were known as Puritans when they were in England, because they were dissatisfied with the incomplete religious reform of the Church of England, as well as the political repression and religious persecution of them by the King and the Church of England. Therefore, these Puritans left the Church of England and fled to the Netherlands. Later, they decided to move to the desolate land on the other side of the Atlantic, hoping to live freely according to their own wishes.

In September 1962, the Mayflower ship carrying 102 Puritans and their families left England and sailed towards the North American continent. After more than two months of arduous sailing, it landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts and settled down thereafter. In the first winter, due to insufficient food, cold weather, rampant infectious diseases, and overwork, more than half of these Puritans died suddenly. In the spring of the second year, local Native American tribal chief Masasaud led kind-hearted Native Americans to give the Puritans

At first, there was no fixed date for Thanksgiving, and it was decided by each state on an ad hoc basis. Until 1863, after American independence, President Lincoln declared Thanksgiving a national holiday.

The symbol of Thanksgiving

Turkey, corn, pumpkin, and cranberry sauce are symbols representing the first Thanksgiving. These symbols often appear on holiday decorations and greeting cards. Especially corn, representing the life and death experience of Puritan immigrants. The decoration used on dining tables or doors, corn represents harvest and autumn.

Sweet and sour cranberry sauce was the first food on the Thanksgiving table, and it's also on today's table. Cranberry is a small and sour wild berry that grows in marshy areas of Massachusetts and New England.

Native Americans use its fruits to treat various inflammations and use juice to dye carpets and rugs red. They taught the Puritans how to use sugar and water to cook cranberries and make cranberry sauce. Native Americans call cranberries "ibimi", which means "bitter berry". Immigrants call these 'cranberries' because the flowers of the cranberries drag the stems of the grass upside down, resembling the slender neck of a white crane. Cranberries still grow in New England today.

In 1988, a unique Thanksgiving dinner was held at St. John's Cathedral in New York City. Among the over 4000 guests were representatives of Native American tribes across the country, as well as descendants of immigrants who later arrived in America. In the form of a dinner party, Americans openly acknowledged the contributions of Indian aborigines to the first Thanksgiving Day in the United States, and thanked Indians for sharing their experience and skills. Without the teachings of Native Americans, the initial Puritan immigrants could not have survived in America.

 
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