Ramadan, a time for thanksgiving
- Share via
SOUL FOOD
In this column on Nov. 7, I wrote about the Angels winning the
World Series. I wrote about my doubts that God had tipped the
playoffs in the Angels’ favor, that God had heard the fervent prayers
of their fans and had answered them with the win.
And I wrote about a story a friend had sent to me in an e-mail a
couple weeks before the World Series. To make a short story shorter,
my friend sent me a story, “unofficial evidence,” she said, that our
country is, indeed, a Christian nation.
The story was an account of how the names of all four teams trying
to get to the World Series were associated, in some way, with
Christian culture. Take the Anaheim Angels for instance. The Angels
part seems obvious. Though, when I think of some angels, like, say,
Lucifer, I don’t know. As for Anaheim, the story said the city is
named after Saint Ann.
When I wrote the column, I thought I might hear from some Angels
fans.
Instead, I heard about Anaheim. The first, but not the last,
e-mail I got about the name was signed “from an Orange County
native.”
“I am sure you have had many people e-mail you about your friend’s
e-mail to you saying that Anaheim was named after Saint Ann. Anaheim
is a German name and it means ‘Home By The River’,” wrote the Orange
County native. And so did several other readers. For the record,
that’s very close.
I looked it up on the city of Anaheim Web site.
“Anaheim began in 1857 as a colony of German farmers and
vintners,” it reads. “The city’s name is a composition of ‘Ana’ from
the nearby Santa Ana River and ‘Heim,’ German for home. Those early
pioneers considered this location their ‘home by the river’.”
And that’s pretty much all I heard about that column until a
couple of days ago, when an Angels’ fan and friend of mine said,
“Hey, I’ve been meaning to ask you if you heard about writing that
column about the World Series on the day after Ramadan started?”
No. I didn’t. No one said a thing. But I wish someone had. I had
intended, at the start or nearer the middle of Ramadan, near
Thanksgiving, to tell you about Turkan and Burak Aksoylu’s first
American Thanksgiving experience. I’m not sure why I didn’t.
I met Turkan and Burak during Ramadan last year when Turkan was
teaching a class about Islam, which I attended at the Tolerance
Foundation here in Huntington Beach. She was a gracious and patient
teacher.
In the days after the class, Turkan sent me an essay she called
“Sept. 11, Ramadan and Thanksgiving.”
Turkan, an Australian-born Muslim, lived in Turkey for 13 years.
Her husband, Burak, who was born in Turkey, is now a postdoctoral
scholar at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, where
they live.
Last year, Ramadan began on Nov. 16, barely more than two months
after the devastating events of Sept. 11, and only a week before
Thanksgiving. In a gesture of goodwill, Burak asked the institute to
help him find a family to celebrate Thanksgiving with.
Husband and wife David and Jacky called with an invitation. Turkan
made a tray of baklava to add to the traditional Thanksgiving meal.
Jacky and David deferred dinner until after sunset since Turkan and
Burak were still fasting from sunrise to sunset during Ramadan.
“Jacky was surprised to hear that we were not unfamiliar with the
concept of Thanksgiving,” Turkan wrote. “As Muslims, we get together
with our friends and family for dinner in Ramadan. After a day of
fasting, dinner becomes a special occasion. We give our thanks to the
Lord for his blessings and enjoin in communal prayer.”
That evening, Turkan said, turned feelings of loss and loneliness
to warmth and hope. This year, the 30-day Ramadan fast ended last
week. Its end coincided with the Feast of St. Nicholas and last day
of Hanukkah.
It’s still a debate for some whether ours is a nation under God.
Meanwhile, thank God, it is still a nation that allows us the freedom
of religion.
Ramadan blessings! Happy St. Nicholas Day! Happy Hanukkah!
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.