Sixteen Reasons for Thanksgiving
Published in Marietta (GA) Daily Journal, 11/20/21
In his novel
“Anna Karenina” Tolstoy declared, “All happy families resemble each other;
every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.”
A
recent visit to my hometown to see a 93-year-old sister brought Tolstoy’s
sentence to mind. For an entire year, thanks to Fauci & Company., my
childless, frail sister neither saw nor was she seen by any of her siblings.
Finally seeing Margurette plus four more of my 16 brothers and sisters reminded
me of the deep love all 17 of us have had for each other.
I’ve always placed my
beloved siblings in chronological “clumps.” My oldest brother R.C., born in
1917, was a farmer, though not a life-long tenant farmer like our father. R.C.
eventually had his own farm and land. Our father worked on the farms of three
different “men on the hill,” never owning a handful of dirt. Unlike Paul (1919)
and Pete (1921), R.C. remained in Mississippi, relishing hard labor. I admire
him immensely.
Who
could blame Paul and Pete for joining the Army in order to escape the cotton
fields? They had picked cotton from early boyhood. Many other Southern farm
boys took the same path. Paul and Pete loved the military, despite their duty
in some of the worst fighting of World War II. Nobody enjoyed life more than they. How
culturally enriched the Hines family became when Paul brought home an Italian
bride from Trieste soon after the war ended. Away from her home and its
Adriatic breezes, Antonia fought nobly and successfully against Southern heat
and grease.
Ida,
Jewel and Authula (just call her Thula) were housewives their entire lives. I
wouldn’t be scornful of the word “housewife” in their presence if I were you.
Well aware of the changing culture in the late 50s and early 60s, all three of
them would tell you quickly what they thought about the increasingly negative
influence of Hollywood. Born in 1922, 1924, and 1926, respectively, they, like
their mother, loved and served their families sacrificially. These stalwart sisters
weren’t too concerned about women’s liberation. Instead of “I am woman, hear me
roar,” they were more inclined to say “I am woman by the grace of God.”
Ida was what Southern
folks would often call “a mess.” Overflowing with stories and jokes, she could
occasionally be slightly risqué which led our mother to cup her hand over her
mouth to abort laughter and then whisper, “Ida!”
Margurette and Minnie (1928 and 1930) comprise
one of the four clumps of two. Margurette was the last sister to be a full time
housewife while Minnie, a mother of three, was a Registered Nurse. Minnie
married a Yankee. Funny and brilliant, Ramsey took delight in our country ways
and loved coffee and laughter as much as we did. Margurette and Minnie’s love
for each other always made me think they were twins.
Walter Hines, Jr. (Bub)
and Durwood (1931 and 1933) comprise the fourth clump and the second duo. Bub
was a businessman and then a pastor; Durwood was a mail carrier. They both told
hilarious jokes and always kept up with current events. This latter habit
rubbed off on me.
The remaining three
clumps are the ones with whom I grew up. The siblings named above had left home
and had families by the time I was born. Almedia (1935), Ruby (1937), and
Janelle (1938) were as close as three sisters could be. They were smart.
Because our mother enjoyed working in the garden and fields with our father, I
still picture these precious sisters doing most of the household chores.
Almedia became the executive secretary of the state Pardons and Parole Board;
Ruby, the secretary for a prominent lawyer who ran for Governor; and Janelle a
secretary for Sunbeam Corporation and later Raytheon.
Carolyn and Tressie
(1940 and 1942) were only four and two years older than I yet each often seemed
like a mother to me. Carolyn married a Marine and traveled the world; Tressie
had a family and became a Registered Nurse.
I and Carlton (1944 and
1947) grew up under the gentle reign of Eisenhower (a hero to both Paul and
Pete). Carlton graduated from the University of Southern Mississippi and has
worked in banking and insurance. We’re close. “Baby brothers” have to stick
together.
No day passes without
one or more of these siblings parking in my mind. Our poverty was elegant,
though real. Rather than turning us into rabid socialists, it steered us to
call upon the God our parents loved and served. R.C., Paul, Pete, Ida, Jewell,
and Durwood have left us. Their invigorating spirits have not. I’m thankful for
all 16 of these incredible people.
Roger Hines
November 18, 2021
And Ed and I are very thankful to have been blessed by knowing you and Nancy ! You two are God's special emissaries to the world.
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