Wee Babes in Sicily

July 10, 2012

It’s taken me days to recover from the hyperbolic Festa di San Paolo in Palazzolo Acreide.

Sicily: Land of Immoderation.

The day was pizza-oven hot. You needed shorts, a cold beer, and your back against a cool blue wall as you waited for Saint Paul to parade out of the church amid pyrotechnics so intense it felt like the town was under bombardment.

Sicilian Men Against a Blue Wall, copyright Jann Huizenga

My American Man wore shorts, too. (Folks, this is totally beside the point, but do you know how hard it has been to coax him out of his Paul Bunyon duds and into Italian-made clothes? And yet: he now wears embroidered floral shirts and carries lavender blessed by a priest.)

While the men stayed cool with beer, the women fanned themselves (Sicily’s Spanish heritage on full display).

Sicilian Woman with a Fan, copyright Jann Huizenga

The animals have been blessed by the priest…

Animals Blessed at Festa di San Paolo in Palazzolo Acreide, copyright Jann Huizenga

though they don’t look too happy about it.

Cow at Festa di San Paolo in Palazzolo Acreide, copyright Jann Huizenga

Waiting, waiting…

Come on. Hurry up, Saint Paul!!! We’re dying out here.

Men Wait for San Paolo to parade by in Palazzolo Acreide, copyright Jann Huizenga

Waiting for San Paolo to Parade By in Palazzolo Acreide, copyright Jann Huizenga

OK, the explosives are just about rigged up–all over the church, thousands of them.

Rigging up Fireworks for Festa di San Paolo, Palazzolo, copyright Jann Huizenga

Notices have been posted everywhere that it’s your own damn fault if you get blown to bits.

Sweet Jesus. What’s in store?

You run as far away from the piazza as you can. The locals have warned you that “there will be no air” there.

Then all hell breaks loose.

Even blocks away from the epicenter, kids have to plug their ears.

Festa di San Paolo, copyright Jann  Huizenga

And run for cover.

Impossible. Completely impossible!

Imagine a war zone. Shock and Awe. Combine that with an earthquake and Etna exploding. That’s what it feels like.

Festa di San Paolo, copyright Jann Huizenga

Now here he comes, the hero of the day. Paparazzi move like Ferraris through the baked streets.

Paparazzi in at Festa di San Paolo in Palazzolo Acreide, copyright Jann Huizenga

 More heroes below. (And we think we’re cooking?)

Festa di San Paolo in Palazzolo Acreide, copyright Jann Huizenga

Wee babes, all pink and dimpled, barely out of the womb, are passed up in the hot sun to be blessed by San Paolo.

Festa di San Paolo in Palazzolo Acreide, copyright Jann Huizenga

And then it’s home for siesta.

***

The Feast of San Paolo takes place in Palazzolo Acreide every year on June 27-29. The same town hosts the Feast of San Sebastiano in August (dates vary). Both festas are amazing, though I prefer the latter because the piazza where it is held is roomier so you get a better view even when you’re far away. Don’t miss the morning parade that winds all over town to collect bread.

***

Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

Aristocrats, Saints & Pyromaniacs

June 3, 2012

It’s the annual insanity that Sicilians call festa.

The village aristocrats overlook the piazza from the comfort of their balconi, watching us wait for San Giorgio the Dragon Slayer.

Festa di San Giorgio, people watching from balcony; copyright Jann Huizenga

Inside the church, the young men chew their fingers, get pep talks from the old guys, and send up lionesque roars. This is how they get psyched up to haul Saint George and his rearing steed around town on their shoulders.

Festa di San Giorgio in Ragusa Ibla; copyright Jann Huizenga

The frisky altar boys horse around.

Altar Boys in Sicily; copyright Jann Huizenga

Then with a roar, my dragon-slayer is hoisted into the evening air amid wild applause, tears, and a squall of confetti. Even I–a non-Catholic who barely knows one saint from another–have a pounding heart. (Saint George belongs to me!)

San Giorgio in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily; copyright Jann Huizenga

He prances around town for a while and then the pyromaniacs get to work.

Duomo di San Giorgio in Ragusa Ibla; copyright Jann Huizenga

They light the fuses for the gran finale con artistico e fantasmagorico spettacolo piromusicale. Balconies are jammed with people and kids are stacked on top of parents and grandparents. The whole village feels like it’s blowing up.
Duomo di San Giorgio in Ragusa Ibla at Festa; copyright Jann Huizenga

Cinders land in your hair and singe your arms; babies wail in fright. You stumble out of the piazza choking on the thick stench of gunpowder, rush home thinking “Sicilians are nuts!” and watch the rest of the show from the relative safety of your house.

Duomo di San Giorgio in Ragusa Ibla; copyright Jann Huizenga

The next day they’re at it again.

Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

A New Year Dawns on a Sicilian Piazza

January 1, 2012

After days of chilly wind and rain, 2012 started just purrfectly.

There was bright white sun on the piazza.

And a gigantic, baroque Kiss-Fest.

I smooched with my newspaper-tobacco man. I don’t know his name, but he held me in a tight embrace.

I pecked the pink cheeks of the myopic, eccentric composer who once invited me and my husband into his house to show off his antique objets, family coat of arms, and pianos.

I kissed the village aristocrat, who towers head and shoulders above all the other little men of his WW II generation.

My husband, a rather shy and undemonstrative sort, had to embrace these same men. Their abrasive stubble unnerved him, and he got his sunglasses tangled up in the specs of the myopic composer. “I’d only let Sicilians get away with this,” he said.

I did not get photos of him cringing and doing the Sicilian Smooch-Smooch Ritual (darn), but here are others from New Year’s morning on the piazza:

Coffee and brioche at a Sicilian al fresco bar, copyright Jann Huizenga

brioscia integrale con miele

Two Sicilian Men, copyright Jann Huizenga

Scene in Ragusa Ibla, copyright Jann HuizengaSicilian Man in Little Truck (Ape), copyright Jann Huizenga

***

Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

Red for Saints, Santas & Sinners

December 17, 2011

Bright red, a rosso the color of Rudolph’s nose, is the leitmotif of the season here in Southeast Sicily.

Political street theater in Catania, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Political street theater in Catania on December 16, 2011

Political street theater in Catania, copyright Jann Huizenga

Ms. Santa was handing out "gifts" of scrolled paper that read "Merry Christmas. Monti's government is gifting you a cut in your pension." (A better kind of protest than throwing molotov cocktails, as in Greece, don't you think?)

Festival of Santa Lucia, Siracusa, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Powdered wig, rider and horse at Siracusa's Festival of Santa Lucia, December 13

Santa Lucia, martyred patron saint of Siracusa, copyright Jann Huizenga

Santa Lucia, martyred patron saint of Siracusa, December 13

Band Members at the Feast of the Immaculate Conception in Scicli, Sicily, Dec 8, 2011

The band at the Feast of the Immaculate Conception in Scicli, December 8

Sicilian Man in Red Tie, Scicli, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Onlooker at Feast of the Immaculate Conception in Scicli, December 8

Altar Boy at Feast of the Immaculate Conception in Ragusa Ibla, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Altar boy at Feast of the Immaculate Conception in Ragusa Ibla, December 7

Sicilian Woman in Red Christmas Shawl, copyright Jann Huizenga

Woman going to mass in Modica

Women's Red-Soled Shoes in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Mass-going woman's shoes

Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

***

To learn more about Monti’s austerity package for Italy, click here.

To learn more about Santa Lucia, click here.

 

Sicily: Far from the Madding Crowd

December 12, 2011

It’s nice to be away from forced Yuletide cheer, piped-in Jingle Bell Rock, wild mobs in big-box stores, Santas tolling bells in your face, parking lot chaos.

Call me Scrooge if you will.

But a low-key Christmas is a welcome change. Sicilians in villages get festive by hand-painting Santa scenes on shop windows.

Painting Santa in Sicily, copyright Jann HuizengaOr by walking through darkness with light.

Candle-light procession at Christmas time in Sicily, copyright Jann HuizengaOr by hanging a few stars.

Christmas Decorations in Southeast SIcily, copyright Jann HuizengaIsn’t that enough? (Along with some fine food and a little bubbly?)

Take it easy this holiday and don’t forget the simple things.

Buone Feste!

***

My fellow blogger from Calabria speaks eloquently about this very topic.

***

Click to subscribe to BaroqueSicily.

Site Meter BlogItalia.it - La directory italiana dei blog