Madonna-Warrior from the Skies

May 30, 2011

Like a bolt from the blue, the Madonna storms out of the skies on a mighty white stallion, sword at hand, slashing and slaying an army of Saracens.

Not  your version of the Madonna?

Well, this is Sicily, where everything’s a little different.

The year is 1091. The place is Scicli, near Sicily’s southern coast.

Madonna delle Milizie festa, Scicli, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Madonna delle Milizie

The Normans ruled Sicily at that time. Norman knights were battling Saracens and getting creamed. The Norman leader, Roger de Hauteville, prayed to the Madonna for help, and–miracle of miracles–she swooped down to save the day.

Almost a thousand years later, la Madonna delle Milizie is still revered and celebrated in this stony little baroque town. The entire 1091 event is re-enacted each year in late May.

Normans (actors) in Scicli Festival Madonna delle Milizie

The Normans

Saracens at the festival of Madonna delle Milizie in Scicli, Sicily

The Saracens

What do the locals eat to celebrate the 1091 event?

Turkish heads.

That’s right. They feast on testa di turco, a large cream puff in the shape of a turban. Never mind that the Turks came nowhere near Sicily until the 16th century.

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Faces of Sicily

May 26, 2011

Four Sicilians, copyright Jann Huizenga

Sicilian Couple, copyright Jann Huizenga

Sicilian Angel-Devil, copyright Jann Huizenga

Sicilian Man with Wine, copyright Jann HuizengaSicilian Women, copyright Jann HuizengaSicilian Man with Melon, copyright Jann Huizenga

Sicilian Women, copyright Jann HuizengaSicilian Men in Coppole, copyright Jann HuizengaTwo Men in Acate, Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga Two Sicilian Men in Suits, copyright Jann Huizenga

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Thanks to Charles for this idea and title.

Do you have a favorite Sicilian face? Send me the photo and I’ll post it here. (Click on “Contact” and I’ll tell you how to get it to me.)

Lucy's favorite Sicilian face, her dad

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"Waiting for a Friend" by photographer Diana Ruff

 

 

 

Art class in Ortygia (Siracusa) by Michelle Reale

 

 

 

 

 

Addio Roma, Hello Rubber Shoes

May 22, 2011

Not long ago she lived in trendy Trastevere among wine bars and super-chic Romans. She wore stilettos and took her coffee on Piazza Santa Maria.

Now Roberta wears rubber shoes and lives among cows and pigs, horses and dogs, carobs and rocks. Gnarled olives sway in yellow skies; she’s landed in a Van Gogh canvas come to life.  Out in the direction of Africa, there’s the distant glint of the sea.

“I’m not a country girl,” she insisted a few years ago when she bought the tumble-down Sicilian farm house.

Roberta Corradin with Lettuce, copyright Jann Huizenga

I watch now as she saws the lettuce root off with a knife. She rinses the leaves in an outdoor sink, tucks them into a tea towel, and spins her arm around like a windmill.

Roberta Corradin in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

“Is that a Sicilian farmer’s technique?” I ask.

“No,” she says. “I did the same thing hanging out my window in Rome.”

How virtuous it feels to eat lettuce just five minutes out of the ground, seasoned with a just-plucked lemon and Sicilian sea salt.

Salad in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Note how Italians slice their lettuce into ribbons thin as fettuccine.

We also eat a salad of carrots, provolone cheese, basil, and almonds.

Carrot and Provolone Salad, copyright Jann Huizenga

And the traditional Sicilian cucuzza soup. Cucuzza is the baseball bat-size zucchini that’s in all the markets now.

Vegetable market in Sicily (including the long green cucuzza), copyright Jann Huizenga

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Roberta Corradin is the author of Taste and Tradition: A Culinary Journey Through Northern and Central Italy. (Yup, I helped.)

Roberta Corradin in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

Taste and Tradition: A Culinary Journey Through Northern and Central Italy by Roberta Corradin and Jann Huizenga

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I Have Been Released

May 18, 2011

Discharged.

Not from the pokey, but from a five-day stopover in a Sicilian hospital.

Which–I kid you not–was wonderful.

Maybe wonderful is a bit too strong a word. But other than the very first day, when I was genuinely ill, I found the experience entertaining, relaxing, and heart-warming.

There were surprises galore. Family members pretty much camp out in their loved one’s room, unfolding a hospital cot at night. Which means that instead of two people in a small room at night, there can be four (in my case there were three since I had no family member at hand. “You mean I coulda been sleeping in the hospital had I been there?” my husband giggled over the phone.) Poor “lonely” me, how I was pitied! My roommate’s family adopted me for the duration.

My friends came with pajamas, robes, toothpaste, soaps, novels (I read two!), camera, computer, underwear, creams, and smiles. They collared doctors and spoke on my behalf. They ran errands for me and even cleaned my house. That’s how friends are in Italy.

The cot closet on my floor. They look like something you'd haul to the beach, don't they?

Public hospitals here are deeply religious places. A huckster came by daily to peddle icons of saints, like gypsies hawk roses in Roman trattorie. A crucifix hung high on a pumpkin wall so I could keep it in my view while lying on the cement slab that Sicilians call a pillow. Sacred images of Papa Benedetto XVI and the Virgin festooned the room. On Saturday evening, as my roommate and I lay prone in dim light, I blinked and saw a black-vested priest hovering over us. Was he performing Last Rites? Sure seemed like it.

Friendship bloomed in the room (between me and my sweet roommate Laura, Rescuer of Abandoned Dogs). So did love. Our male nurse fell under Laura’s spell. He’s already arranged dinner in romantic Scicli when Laura is discharged, with me to tag along as chaperone.

Laura with our nurse, Salvatore

Evening visitation hours–when the doors yawned open to the general public–felt like a rowdy cocktail party or art opening. People milled about in corridors, smooching old friends and chatting, poking their heads in for a chat and a kiss-kiss with the invalids.

Sicilian doctors—like all Sicilians—travel in packs. They sweep into your sickroom every morning with flair, high spirits, and professionalism. I found them charming, competent, and caring. My Italian was really not up to discussing internal organs and such with four Italian doctors at a time, but they were Patience personifed. One doctor–the best in town, they say–was a hipster Kewpie doll, with mussed porcupine hair atop a baby face. Another doctor strode in every morning on high-heeled pigskin cowboy boots, stethoscope swaying, and when she sat down and crossed her legs I drooled over the gorgeously distressed jeans she wore under her white doctor coat. I didn’t seem to have a primary care doctor; they were equally involved. The medici were displeased at the medication my American doctor had prescribed, saying Europe had long ago quit using it and that it “was still used in the USA just because it’s cheap.”

How much did all these blood tests and EKGs and IVs and ambulance ride and meals and nurses and doctors cost?

Nothing.

Not a penny.

There wasn’t even any paperwork I had to do.

America, why are you fighting nationalized health care?

I’ll miss this place and the hardworking, heartful folks who labor within her pumpkin walls. Thank you, Italy, for this gift. Ti ringrazio dal profundo del mio cuore.

Saying goodbye to the discharge doctor; photo by R. Corradin

PS Hope to keep you up-to-date on the budding romance.

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Slip Back in Time in Sicily

May 16, 2011

Remember slips?

They’re still worn in Sicilia.

They wave from backstreet balconies, flags of nylon nostalgia.

 

Hanging Laundry in Sicily, copyright Jann Huizenga

 

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