Eric Metaxas: The 'miracle' of Squanto and the first Thanksgiving


Actor Kalani Queypo, center, portrays Squanto in Saints & Strangers. Photo from National Geographic Channel

Without the help of Squanto, a Patuxet man who spoke English and Wampanoag, the Pilgrims wouldn't have survived in Massachusetts, author Eric Metaxas notes:
n the bleak November of 1620, the Mayflower passengers, unable to navigate south to the warmer land of Virginia, decided to settle at Plymouth, the very spot where Squanto had grown up. They had come in search of religious freedom, hoping to found a colony based on Christian principles.

Their journey was very difficult, and their celebrated landing on the frigid shores of Plymouth proved even more so. Forced to sleep in miserably wet and cold conditions, many of them fell gravely ill. Half of them died during that terrible winter. One can imagine how they must have wept and wondered how the God they trusted and followed could lead them to this agonizing pass. They seriously considered returning to Europe.

But one day during that spring of 1621, a Wampanoag walked out of the woods to greet them. Somehow he spoke perfect English. In fact, he had lived in London more recently than they had. And if that weren’t strange enough, he had grown up on the exact land where they had settled.

Because of this, he knew everything about how to survive there; not only how to plant corn and squash, but how to find fish and lobsters and eels and much else. The lone Patuxet survivor had nowhere to go, so the Pilgrims adopted him as one of their own and he lived with them on the land of his childhood.

Get the Story:
Eric Metaxas: The Miracle of Squanto’s Path to Plymouth (The Wall Street Journal 11/25)

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