People from Indonesia.
Thanksgiving
Virtually every country on the planet has people who observe harvest festivals.
Malaysia celebrates harvest festival May of each year. This is celebrated with agricultural shows, cultural programs, buffalo races, and traditional games.
Malaysia celebrates the Harvest Festival because it is celebrating the good harvesting Malaysia. It is held every year at the end of May and there are many activities such as buffalo races, agricultural shows, exhibitions, cultural programs, merrymaking, feasting with rice wine and other traditional games.
The Lohri Holiday is a Punjab holiday that celebrates the end of the coldest part of the winter, and the winter harvest. It is celebrated by burning bonfires.
In the UK the Church of England (Anglican or Episcopalian branch of Christianity) celebrates Harvest Festival but the Roman Catholic Church does not. The modern Harvest Festival in Anglican churches was instituted (or possibly re-instituted) in the 19th Century, with some opposition from the more puritan or low-church wing of the Anglicans.
The theme of the poem "Harvest Hymn" is gratitude for the abundance of nature and the joy of harvesting crops. It celebrates the bounty of the earth and the rewards of hard work in farming. Additionally, it conveys a sense of connection to the land and a reverence for the cycle of life.
They gathered some sheaves from the corn to build the fire that celebrates the completion of the harvest. Pictures of wheat sheaves are a decorative motif that dates back many centuries.
The yam festival is very important to the Ibo because it celebrates the coming of the new yam harvest. The old yams are used in their all yam foods to make room for the new harvest. The homes are cleansed and the women prepare a feast of yams for the celebration.
Celtics celebrates the end of every harvest and the start of winter. The celebration is called Samhain. It starts on the sunset of October 31st until the sunset of November 1st.
India celebrates it