the thanksgiving that we celebrate every single year based on the story between the mayflower pilgrims and the it was the first harvest festival that the pilgrims had after they landed. it does an injustice to what really happened and to the relationship that truly existed between indians and english travelers. brian: time to get the true story. fox nation streaming right now on fox nation. descend mayflower pilgrims director of c plymouth. such an important story but you have the reality. what we know mayflower was supposed to head to northern virginia and ends up with what we now know cape cod and 101 passengers were staring at what type of challenge? it was a terrible, terrible dark and cold winter and very icy outside and many, many people on the ship were sick. by the end of that winter that
pa nothings. the indians and the pilgrims were holding hands, the story you hear in school. no, the real truth. understand that story. it does an injustice to what really happened and to the relationship that truly existed between the woman pa nags and english settlers. brian: they would not have survived would want the indians. that is great more than story in 1620. rita, who has descendants that go all the way back to the mayflower, joined us last hour to talk about this relationship. they were very helpful. they helped to teach the pilgrims how to plant and create a good harvest and eventually a piece alliance was agreed to by both a peace alliance was
a look at your headlines. send it back to you. brian: thanks, jillian. coming up straight ahead. 400 years since pilgrims arrived in the new world. what do we know about them. a descendent of the mayflower is next. [gobbles] when it comes to autism, finding the right words can be tough. finding understanding doesn t have to be. together, we can create a kinder, more inclusive world for the millions of people on the autism spectrum. go to autismspeaks.org and now your co-pilot. still a father. but now a friend. still an electric car. just more electrifying.
charts, domestic violence is increasing, people need spiritual encouragement. jillian: meanwhile, another california pastor makes a mockery of the restrictions, briefly turning a chapel into a strip club. the move comes after a judge allows a strip club to reopen but not houses of worship. he jokingly removed his tie which apparently then made it legal to hold services. that is a look at your headlines. brian: all right. that s very interesting. i ve got to find out how that ends up. meanwhile, jillian, good job. starting today you can actually download a brand new special on fox nation, it s called a very nation thanksgiving, a look back at 400 years since the mayflower landed at the wrong place but, man, they made a lot of great moves despite terrible conditions. here s a clip from the real story of thanksgiving. watch. the thanksgiving that we celebrate every single year is based on the story between the mayflower pilgrims and the woman
members. we have a wampanoag advisory committee made up of native people. so, it is the first real attempt to have a historically accurate and a culturally-inclusive commemoration. reporter: a member of the mashpee wampanoag tribe, steve peters, created an exhibit for plymouth 400 called our story. it is pretty of the beginning yf the end for my people, here. you know, it is important that people understand it so that they can start to be a little bit more humane and compassionate. reporter: the wampanoag people have lived here for thousands of years. a pandemic nearly wiped all of them out before the pilgrim s arrival. that tragedy made the wampanoag more acceptable to new alliances. the two groups came together the fall harvest in 1641, what we now call thanksgiving. they lived side-by-side for 50 years, until war broke out, devastating the wampanoag and