I'm sure only America celebrates Thanksgiving because it is about the Pilgrims settling on the new land and holding a feast for the Native Americans to show their appreciation. The natives helped show the Pilgrims how to survive by planting things, hunting certain animals, etc... It's just like how the 4th o' July is America's Independence Day.
Both the United States and Canada have Thanksgiving holidays, though they are different. Both are located on the continent of North America, but you can't really say the whole North America celebrates the same holiday.
Ireland does not celebrate Thanksgiving at all. It is US and Canadian holiday. Nobody else celebrates it. The Irish living in America, celebrate Thanksgiving the same as everyone else.
The same way you do in the United States - by enjoying a turkey dinner and lamenting on what you're thankful for. The only real difference between Canada's Thanksgiving and the US's Thanksgiving is the date.
The same reason America celebrates the 4th of July: it commemorates the day the struggle of independence from the "mother country" begun.
Turkey.
No. Thanksgiving as a national holiday is also celebrated in Canada. There are also harvest festivals and celebrations around the world at various time of year coinciding with the yearly gathering of crops. Most are not called "Thanksgiving" yet they celebrate the same thing.
Republika Srpska celebrates Independence Day and Republic Day on the same day.
The same thing as in any Christian Church it celebrates the birth of Jesus.
It is celebrated the same time America celebrates it.
It is celebrated the same time America celebrates it.
In Canada, Thanksgiving is on the second Monday in October.Thanksgiving is not celebrated in Canada. It is only celebrated in America. It's when the pilgrims had a feast of thankfulness for getting to America. It is not a universal holiday, only national to America.
usa