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Researchers learn how bleach kills bacteria

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— Developed more than 200 years ago and found in households around the world, chlorine bleach is among the most widely used disinfectants, yet scientists never have understood exactly how the familiar product kills bacteria. New research from the University of Michigan, however, reveals key details in the process by which bleach works its antimicrobial magic.

In a study published in the November 14 issue of the journal Cell, a team led by molecular biologist Ursula Jakob describes a mechanism by which hypochlorite, the active ingredient of household bleach, attacks essential bacterial proteins, ultimately killing the bugs.

“As so often happens in science, we did not set out to address this question,” said Jakob, an associate professor of molecular, cellular and developmental biology.

“But when we stumbled on the answer midway through a different project, we were all very excited.”

Jakob and her team were studying a bacterial protein known as heat shock protein 33 (Hsp33), which is classified as a molecular chaperone. The main job of chaperones is to protect proteins from unfavorable interactions, a function that’s particularly important when cells are under conditions of stress, such as the high temperatures that result from fever.

“At high temperatures, proteins begin to lose their three-dimensional molecular structure and start to clump together and form large, insoluble aggregates, just like when you boil an egg,” said lead author Jeannette Winter, who was a postdoctoral fellow in Jakob’s lab.

And like eggs, which once boiled never turn liquid again, aggregated proteins usually remain insoluble, and the stressed cells eventually die.

Jakob and her research team fi gured out that bleach and high temperatures have very similar effects on proteins. Just like heat, the hypochlorite in bleach causes proteins to lose their structure and form large aggregates.

“Many of the proteins that hypochlorite attacks are essential for bacterial growth, so inactivating those proteins likely kills the bacteria,” said second author Marianne Ilbert, a postdoctoral fellow in ­Jakob’s lab.

These findings are not only important for understanding how bleach keeps our kitchen countertops sanitary, but they may lead to insights into how we fi ght off bacterial infections. Our own immune cells produce significant amounts of hypochlorite as a fi rst line of defense to kill invading microorganisms. Unfortunately, hypochlorite damages not just bacterial cells, but ours as well. It is the uncontrolled production of hypochlorite acid that is thought to cause tissue damage at sites of chronic inflammation.

How did studying the protein Hsp33 lead to the bleach discovery?

The researchers learned that hypochlorite, rather than damaging Hsp33 as it does most proteins, actually revs up the molecular chaperone. When bacteria encounter the disinfectant, Hsp33 jumps into action to protect bacterial proteins against bleach induced aggregation.

“With Hsp33, bacteria have evolved a very clever system that directly senses the insult, responds to it and increases the bacteria’s resistance to bleach,” Jakob said.

Civil rights groups unite to sound alarm hate-crime spread

by José de la Isla & Jackie Guzmán

Marcelo LuceroMarcelo Lucero

The Suffolk County, N.Y., murder of Marcelo Lucero, a 37-year-old Ecuadorean national who had lived in the United States for 16 years, has sparked a new level of concern about hate crimes.

Six of the nation’s leading civil rights groups are sounding the alarm about the nature of such incidents.

The National Council of La Raza, Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Asian American Justice Center, Anti-Defamation League and National Urban ­League conducted a video-streamed news conference Nov. 24 at www.nclr.org/risinghatecrimes. Their press alert was themed as a “wake up call for America.”

Janet Murguía, president and CEO of NCLR, said that the polarized debate over immigration has led to the increase in violence and hate groups targeting Latinos.

“And the key players in this wave of hate are found among elected officials and the media, especially talk radio and cable news,” she said, referring to hosts such as Lou Dobbs and Michael Savage.

Seven teenagers have been arraigned on gang assault and other crimes in the Lucero murder. Some are now facing new hate related charges. They are also alleged to have attacked another Hispanic man who escaped a half-hour before Lucero was assaulted near the Patchogue train station.

Federal authorities including the FBI have investigated 750 incidents involving violence, threats, vandalism and arson against Arabs, Muslims, Sikhs and South Asians between Sept. 11, 2001 and March 2007. NAACP Washington bureau director Hilary Shelton said that now, while the nation should be celebrating, “There are unfortufi lled with hatred, fear and division.”

Last month the FBI released a report claiming, “Hate crimes involving race and religion declined by 1.3% in the U.S. last year.” However, the same report showed crimes against Hispanics increased for fi ve straight years, from 595 in 2003 to 830 in 2007, with similar increases for Asians.

­The presidential election drew public attention to one form of race bias, while other animosities remain unharnessed.

Referring to incidents around the country that rise and fall, AAJC’s Priya Murty told Weekly Report, “We are supposedly in this post-racial state, but that has not been borne out.”

Noting that individuals often do not even report incidents, her group has documented many occurrences which attempted to associate the president-elect with Arabs, Islam, unchristian faith, and terrorism — all xenophobic digressions from reality.

The same phenomenon, she claimed, has been abundantly expressed about Sikhs and immigrants in noteworthy incidents of intimidation perpetrated on South Asians.

The Anti-Defamation League at the time called for a renewed commitment to prevent prejudice-based crimes. Hispanic Link.

Students, teachers protest policy of Scholarship Fund

­by Jackie Guzmán

Sworn in the new District 9 Supervisor: David Campos, next to Mayor Gavin Newsom, after he was sworn in as a San Francisco supervisor Thursday, Dec. 4 in front of a large, boisterous crowd at San Francisco City Hall. (Photo by Jorge Luis Garcia)Sworn in the new District 9 Supervisor David Campos, next to Mayor Gavin Newsom, after he was sworn in as a San Francisco supervisor Thursday, Dec. 4 in front of a large, boisterous crowd at San Francisco City Hall. (Photo by Jorge Luis Garcia)

More than 100 students, parents and teachers protested Nov. 20 what they consider a discriminatory policy of denying scholarships to undocumented students­ at Hispanic Scholarship Fund headquarters in San Francisco. Similar demonstrations had been held earlier this year in San Diego and Los Angeles.

HSF, the nation’s largest Hispanic student scholarship provider, made awards totaling $26.5 million during the 2006-2007 academic year. Undocumented students are ineligible because of their legal status, according to HSF communications director Chino Chapa, who states the scholarships are for “Hispanic-American” students only. Undocumented students do not qualify as they comprise only half of that designation.

The California-based Association of Raza Educators says it plans, with more than 20 other groups, to pursue additional strategies to press HSF to change its policy.

ARE co-chairs José Lara and Eilene Cruz met with Chapa prior to the demonstration. Lara told Weekly Report that Chapa challenged ARE’s contentions that undocumented students are the most needy and a “safer bet” than other scholarship recipients to complete their schooling.

Chapa maintained that legal-resident students are 2008better prospects when it comes to completing their education, have greater opportunities and are more likely to contribute to the workforce.

Lara said that undocumented youth, “who are some of our brightest and hardest working students, are being thrown out in the cold. They are the ones with the greatest need because they are not eligible for state or federal financial aid.”

The press has reported many instances of students, brought to the United States without papers as infants, who went on to become valedictorians of their graduating high school classes or who lost college scholarships because of their status.

Kristan Kirsh, HSF’s public relations manager, told Weekly Report that the exclusion of students who could not prove legal U.S. residency was an HSF board decision.

­When Weekly Report requested details, including a copy of the board minutes when the action was taken, Kirsh responded by email, saying, “We are not required to give out board meeting minutes, but we thank you for your interest.”

Lara stated that HSF does not “want to jeopardize its funding” from donors, including many major corporate givers, and wants to avoid any controversy that could result.

His group and its affiliates see their next step involving a campaign to contact HSF board members for re-consideration, if the board has taken formal action on the matter. Hispanic Link.

­

Amero to become U.S.’s new currency when dollar collapses

by the El Reportero’s news services

Pictures of the new currency that will supposedly replace the US dollar have appeared on the Russian Internet. The United States is reportedly working on the new currency, the amero, which will be common for the USA, Mexico and Canada.

The unstable financial situation in the world, the collapsing oil prices and the growing foreign debt of the United States may eventually crush the US dollar as the world’s major currency. Needless to say that the US authorities reject the rumors and promise to keep the dollar afloat.

Amero notes have no portraits of US presidents on them and resemble the Belarussian rubles. For example, there is an image of a deer depicted on a 50-amero note, whereas a picture of a pyramid of Mexican Indians can be seen on a 100-amero note.

Chile steps up pressure on Peru

On Dec. 1, Chile’s rightwingers stepped up the pressure on Peru’s president Alan García over his apparent recanting of his promise to sack Peru’s army commander. Chileans, probably accurately, believe that García is wavering over whether to sack General Edwin Donayre Gotzch because he wants to build up his popularity in Peru. In the Chileans’ view García wants to boost his dismal popularity (under 20% in the opinion polls) by tapping into Peruvians’ traditional hostility to Chile.

Chavistas win majority of states, but opposition makes key gains

President Hugo Chávez interpreted the results of Venezuela’s regional elections on Nov. 23 as a victory for his Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela (PSUV) and a message from the electorate to keep travelling down the path of 21st century socialism.

­The opposition, naturally, placed a different interpretation on the results. While PSUV candidates won 17 out of 22 states, the opposition won fi ve, including three of the six key battlegrounds. Perhaps the most eye-catching development, however, was that dissident Chavistas, widely tipped to pose more of a threat to the PSUV than the offi cial opposition, suffered a crushing defeat.

Nicaragua: Venezuela has offered to replace U.S. aid

MANAGUA, Nicaragua — President Daniel Ortega says Venezuela has offered Nicaragua $100 million in aid if Washington and the European Union cut off funding over disputed elections.

Ortega says his leftist ally Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez made the offer last week “without blackmail, without conditions of any sort.’’

The U.S. government said last week it would freeze $64 million in anti-poverty aid to Nicaragua amid accusations that local elections were fraudulent. The EU has withheld $54 million in budget support.

Ortega spoke Monday in a televised address.

Ortega’s leftist Sandinistas won most of the country’s mayorships in the Nov. 9 elections. Counting with a majority of legislators, 47, the opposition proposed legislation to cancel the results, but Ortega issued a decree declaring that effort unconstitutional.

And then, On Dec. 1, three opposition deputies announced they would not support the bill proposed by the Partido Liberal Nacionalista, so giving a blow to the opposition in Nicaragua. (Latin news, Associated Press, and Pravda, contributed to this report. )

Deportation victims’ friends testify to spur reform action

by Christina E. Rodríguez

Luis GuitiérrezLuis Guitiérrez

CHICAGO — More than 400 people answered the call from U.S. Rep. Luís Gutiérrez (D) to give testimony for someone they know a neighbor, friend, family member or other intimate who is on the verge of deportation.

Their stories gain a voice, but from the lips of others who know them. The intent is to spotlight their suffering, create public awareness, and ultimately to bring reform.

The witnesses came to St. Pius V Church in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood on Nov. 15 and testified for more than three hours. About 60 volunteers took down names and ages of individuals who depend upon those being deported. Gutiérrez said he is compiling a fact sheet from the information to hand to President-elect Barack Obama and speed up a comprehensive immigration reform effort that leads to the introduction of new legislation in Congress.

“Our government should work to keep our families together, not destroy them,” Gutiérrez said.

Among the testimonies came stories from families with deported members. Ana, speaking for her deported husband, said, “We marched, we voted, we got the president we wanted. Now they have to work for us and he has to keep his promises.”

Julie Savitt, who watched as eight Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents surrounded her house to arrest her husband, Adam, talked about losing her companion and family breadwinner.

“Deportation of a loved one is like death without resolution,” said Savitt, who was surrounded by her three children as she spoke.

Volunteers like Myrna García, a doctoral student at the University of California San Diego, now living in Cicero, Ill., identified Gutiérrez’s effort as only one among many that are essential to address the issues.

“I hope something happens but it’s really complicated,” she said. “This has to be one strategy among many.”

Alderman Manny Flores of the First Ward, who has worked with Congressman Gutiérrez, observed, “We’ve been very proactive in providing the type of local policies and legislative initiatives that ensure we protect all members ­of our community.”

He stressed he wanted to join in the effort to engage Barack Obama in the need for immigration reform and family reunification.

“We hope president-elect Barack Obama is very strong in addressing these issues right off the bat. Then in the long term we must come up with some type of comprehensive immigration reform.”

Alderman Billy Ocasio, of the 26th Ward, pushes for an immediate end to the ICE raids and sweeps rounding up undocumented immigrants for deportation.

“This is just the beginning.

We’re just touching the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “There are so many families in the same position where one person is undocumented in a family of citizens and the government is dividing them up.”

Ocasio, who chairs the city council’s human relations committee, said he’s hoping Obama’s words to the immigrant community are genuine.

The city of Chicago, he promised, “will not cooperate with anything that has to do with deportations or raids.”

A Christmas in Nicaragua with an exceptional show in a first-class hotel

Central America: A Paradise on Christmas

by M­argine Quintan­illa

Central America: A paradise where nobody can find youCentral America: A paradise where nobody can find you

A national and international parade of stars, headed by recognized international artists and outstanding Nicaraguan talents, is the proposed repertoire for joy and entertainment presented by Hotel Holiday Inn Hotel primerato the general public to celebrate this Christmas in Managua, Nicaragua.

As Enrique Solórzano, general manager of the hotel said, these celebrations will initiate this Dec. 2 with a concert of Juan Luis Guerra and there will be reinforced on Dec. 6 by nothing less than Los encontrarTigers del Norte. These events will culminate with a gala holiday in honor to the New Year, which will be entertained by the outstanding musical Nicaraguan group, Chequeré.

During these celebrations, the traditional Christmas saucers will not be absent, such as the stuffed hen, stuffed turkey, smoked ham, nacatamales and an international menu that will satisfy the most demanding public.

Also, those participating patrons will be able to enjoy special effects lights that in contrast with the night stars, will make this evening an unforgettable moment.

The promotions have begun already and they go from $69 for single, double or family room.

Solórzano, made sure that they will have availably 200 hotel and restaurant professionals to guarantee the most minimal whim of his customers, who will be welcome with pleasant surprises.

Holiday Inn, is a Five-Star Hotel located in the center of Managua. It specializes in special attention to business and family events, guaranteeing a healthy recreational time for children and adults 24 hours a day.

­Its 18 years in service, has earn its management the most important places in national and international contests in hotel and restaurant service.

Boxing

Friday, Nov. 28 — at Rio Rancho, NM (TeleFutura)

  • ­Jesus Soto Karass vs. Carlos Molina.

Saturday, Nov. 29 — at Ontario, CA (HBO)

  • IBF light middleweight title: Paul Williams vs. Verno Phillips.
  • Chris Arreola vs. Travis Walker.

Friday, Dec. 5 — at Reading, PA (TeleFutura)

  • Mike Jones vs. Luciano Perez.
  • Rock Allen vs. TBA.

Saturday, Dec. 6 — at Las Vegas, NV (HBO-PPV)

  • Oscar De La Hoya vs. Manny Pacquiao.
  • WBO super bantamweight title: Juan Manuel Lopez vs. Sergio Medina.

Thursday, Dec. 11 — at Newark, NJ (Versus)

  • IBF cruiserweight title: Steve Cunningham vs. Tomasz Adamek.
  • Joseph Agbeko vs. William Gonzalez.

Friday, Dec. 12 — at TBA, USA (TeleFutura)

  • Urbano Antillon vs. TBA.

A reflection on the Hispanic role in the 2008 election

by Raúl Yzaguirre

When I agreed to lead Sen. Hillary Clinton’s efforts to attract Latino voters during the presidential primaries, I believed she was the most qualified candidate for the job, in part because she had built a profound and lasting relationship with our community.

In my view, Senator Clinton had earned the respect and support of a majority of the nation’s Latino electorate.

Most Latino primary voters agreed. In state after state, Clinton routinely attracted 60 to 70 percent of the Latino vote against Barack Obama, the eventual Democratic presidential nominee.

President Clinton may have been this nation’s first “black president,” but Bill and Hillary have long been among the Latino community’s greatest advocates. Latinos made significant gains during the Clinton administration in appointments and a wide array of policy initiatives. I felt Senator Clinton’s ascension would lead again to Hispanics playing an important role in the White House.

When Senator Clinton lost in the primaries, I pondered the potential impact on our community that the election of Barack Obama or John McCain could have. I worried that Latinos would not wield much influence with either administration and expressed that view in a commentary in Hispanic Link Weekly Report.

Senator Obama is smart and well intentioned, but he lacks deep ties to our community and an intimate understanding of the needs and interests of the nation’s Latinos.

In short, he doesn’t have a track record with us, I pointed out.

As for Senator McCain, whom I regard as a friend, most Latinos disagree with much of the GOP platform. Our community also was disappointed by his shift to placate his party’s extreme right wing, which many of us view as antagonistic toward immigrants and people of color. His choice of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate, likewise, was a great disappointment.

Given the outcome of the primaries, I believed Latino voters needed to take a broad view of the Nov. 4 election. Our community’s fast-growing population, the overall excitement of the campaign, and a slew of get-out-the-vote efforts attracted record numbers of Latinos to the polls. Senator Clinton may not have made it to the finish line, but Latinos still played an important role.

The White House wasn’t the only game in town. The Latino community redoubled its efforts to elect candidates at the local, state and federal level especially in Congress, where we are woefully underrepresented.

In the long term, Latinos must be well represented in both the Republican and Democratic ranks. Voting exclusively for one political party diminishes our leverage in the overall political process.

It remains vital that we grow our representation in state legislatures in advance of the 2010 U.S. Census. It is our state representatives who, based on the Census results, will get to redraw the district boundaries that directly affect who gets to represent us in the state legislatures and the U.S. House of Representatives.

­The long-term effect of voting local is critically important.

School boards, city councils and the like are often stepping stones to statewide or national office. No matter how you look at it, the road to the White House begins at your local polling place.

If the success of Barack Obama proves anything, it is that the United States is still a country where people born to modest means can rise to the top of the nation’s political or economic ranks. Like Senator Obama, many of our nation’s most successful Hispanic politicians got their start as community activists. I’m convinced there’s a future presidential candidate in our midst.

In the end, I decided, no matter who was elected to the White House, the November election offered Latino voters an opportunity to shape our nation’s future. That opportunity was not wasted. Hispanic Link.

(Raúl Yzaguirre is executive director of the Arizona State University Center for Community Development and Civil Rights. He built the National Council of La Raza into the nation’s most influential Hispanic organization as its president for three decades before stepping down four years ago. E-mail: raul.yzaguirre@asu.edu). © 2008

Esther Aguilera measures her success with a family yardstick

by Jackie Guzmán

(Sixth in a series profiling leaders of major national Hispanic organizations).

SKETCHBOX: In 1977, five Congress members comprised the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. The very next year they held a small dinner to benefit Latino youth.

The event foreshadowed a vision shared by its members to form a separate, nonpartisan educational organization to encourage young people to enter the public-policy arena. Today, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute is the nation’s premier Hispanic policy leadership development group, providing scholarships, internships and fellowships to college-age students, graduates and young professionals.

Each fall since 1980, it hosts a series of events — a public policy conference, annual gala, comedy night — considered in Washington as the kick-off to National Hispanic Heritage Month. I sat down with Esther Aguilera, CHCI’s president and chief executive officer, at a conference table at its headquarters. Paintings of the early chairmen of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute lined the room’s walls. The responsibility for their legacy now converges on this one person.

PROFILE: To Esther Aguilera, meeting challenges in the public-policy arena is about anticipating them and staying ahead of the curve.

She came to this understanding the long way. Born in Jalisco, Mexico, she migrated to the United States in 1972 at age 4 with her mother, Aurora, and five siblings. They came to reunite with her father, Adolfo, who was working as a landscape laborer. He began filing petitions to legalize their stay, a process that would take 15 years.

They rented a two-bedroom house in San Fernando, Calif. Mother Aurora found a job as a garment worker. “My parents struggled to put food on the table,” Aguilera recalls.

She remembers herself entering college in a competitive, white world trapped by low self-esteem “something I had to conquer.”

At Occidental College in Los Angeles, she studied public policy and began her involvement, finding an internship with the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project. “I met a lot of people in policy-making positions who didn’t know the Latino experience. I wanted to make sure a voice of working-poor Latinos was part of what they heard.”

In 1990 she obtained her first Washington, D.C., job as a public-policy analyst with the National Council of La Raza, now the nation’s largest Hispanic advocacy body.

In 1993, she became the executive director of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.

Her responsibilities included building relationships with Congress, the White House and the community constituents it served.

“There and working with the private sector I honed a lot of skills and ideas on how we could progress as a community,” she says.

In 1998, Aguilera was appointed senior advisor to Energy Secretary Bill Richardson and executive director of the Department of Energy’s small business office. Under Richardson, she developed senior policy recommendations leading to implementation of a national Hispanic outreach program and launched DOE’s first small business conference, now an annual event.

In 2004, she became CHCI’s president. After the CHCI board selected the soft-spoken, modest Aguilera from a deep, rich pool of candidates, she quickly proved she was meant for the job.

She brought with her the decision-making experience from other sectors where she had worked. With invisible wisdom, she applies that understanding to her executive responsibilities and to teaching the leadership skills that the CHCI experience imbues in the hundreds of interns it brings regularly to Washington’s inner circles.

Overseeing the organization and its growing budget — over $6 million — is satisfying, she admits. She views it as a measure on how CHCI impacts the lives of tomorrow’s leaders who will build their own legacies.

Aguilera has become a featured speaker at numerous Latino and other national conferences and forums, including Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.

SOAPBOX: Aguilera confides that she has achieved more than her wildest dreams ever conjured.

She sidesteps political debates, states her view unambiguously that while leaders must always stay ahead of the curve, they need to maintain a balance between social drive and a personal life. Early in her career she was a workaholic and now her precious hours include “quality time” with her husband and two children. “When I come home, I focus on them, not work or other distractions,” she tells me.

That balance may be the antithesis of what formal education and early careerists drum into each other, especially when starting out. Women, often professional ones, understand the multiple expectations they have of themselves and believe are expected of them.

­Yet, there’s another connecting element, Esther Aguilera is telling us: character building is not an on-the-job preparation. Her inventory includes home values such as maintaining a memory about where she came from.

She talks with great admiration of her mother, Aurora, who encouraged her and her five siblings to seek higher education. Aguilera illustrates this, remembering the first time her mother, attended a CHCI gala last year. “She was astounded. She had never attended such an elegant event.”

Or is it the other way around? A family’s pathfinder children seek a way though the obstacles and at the most elegant event you are introducing your family to your place beyond those hurdles.

A SPECIAL INFLUENCE: “My elder sister Victoria and my mother are my inspirations. I am so proud of my mother’s courage and how far she has come, having experienced so much struggle. Victoria blazed a path that I followed.”

As the daughter of parents with humble stations in life but grand visions for their children, Aguilera comments that she has achieved far more than the American Dream. She expresses great pride that her five siblings have professional careers; one a doctor, three engineers and one a math/computer teacher.

“After we all went to college, my oldest brother and sister bought the family house and we all chipped in,” she says. For the Aguileras, “family” doesn’t end with childhood.

(Jackie Guzmán is a reporter with Hispanic Link News Service in Washington, D.C.) ©2008

A day of thanks, a meaning we all should truly know

­­­­­

by Marvin J. Ra­mirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

In anticipation of Thanksgiving Day, and in contrast to my previous commentaries on the subject, which were usually an act of explaining immigrants about the day of giving thanks amid a turkey dinner in the United States.

Of course, many of them, who work so hard to feed their families here and back to in their countries, don’t have the time to go to the library and find out every holiday that is celebrated in their host country, and just repeat what they see. Well, just like most people who are natural of the U.S. Many celebrate Cinco de Mayo thinking that it is Mexican Independence Day.

According to one side of the story, the one taught in U.S. history, the Pilgrims are said to have had the “first” thanksgiving feast in the New World in the autumm of 1621.

And as Genealogy Forum explains, the inhabitants of the North American continent were no different than other cultures.

They worshipped the Earth Mother who provided the great herds for hunting, the aquatic creatures for fishing, and for bountiful crops of corn and other provisions. While the ceremonies differed from tribe to tribe across the continent, depending on their geographical location and their circumstances, a common thread weaves all mankind together. There is a common belief that some superior being(s) exist that are responsible for satisfying the need for sustenance and the perpetuation of the cyclical order of nature.

Prior to the Pilgrims’ arrival in 1620, the Native Americans in the eastern shore of the North American continent had encountered other English and Spanish explorers. European visitors inadvertently introduced smallpox to the Native American population in 1617. The subsequent plague decimated the population, with nearly half of the Native Americans succumbing to the virulent disease.

One hundred and two Pilgrim emigrants departed England on the Mayflower. During the voyage, one person was lost overboardand a child was born on board. Of the 102 people who arrived at Plymouth Rock in December of 1620, only 50 survived the first winter in the New World. Cold and starvation killed many. Without the generosity of the Indians who provided food, many more would probably have died. The Pilgrims had much for which to be thankful.

According to the first newspaper published in America, Publick Occurrences, published on 25 September 1690 by Benjamin Harris, a group of Christianized Indians selected the date and place for the celebration of the first thanksgiving with the Pilgrims.

In the Fall of 1621, the thanksgiving commemoration took place. We know that it lasted for three days and included a period of fasting, prayer, religious services, and finally a shared meal. There were 90 Indians involved in this affair. While this celebration was never repeated, it has become the model for what most U.S. citizens celebrate today as Thanksgiving. This “first thanksgiving” marked a tranquil moment in time before tensions escalated and tempers flared.

The Pilgrims viewed the Indians as savages requiring the salvation of Christianity.

They failed to recognize the deeply spiritual nature of the Native American people and their bond with the gods of nature. The Pilgrims aggressively tried to recruit the “savages.” Those who accepted Christianity found themselves ostracized by their tribes and accepted by the Pilgrims as mere disciples. The Pilgrims’ tampering with the beliefs of the Indians greatly offended the tribal leaders.

The Pilgrims were not adept at farming in their new homeland. Whereas the Indians were experts at growing maize, the Pilgrims were slow to learn. Their harvests of 1621 and 1622 were meager, and the Indians offered to exchange some of their harvest for beads and other materials.

The Pilgrims eagerly responded but, in time, demonstrated bad faith by failing to fulfill their side of the bargain. The Indian leaders, proud men of their word, were insulted by the rude way in which they were treated. Tempers flared and, in time, open hostilities broke out.

So, remember on this next Thanksgiving Day, what this date is all about and how it came to be. (Information ­taken from GFS Morgan on the Genealogy Forum.)