Easter in Italy
A visit to Italy during the Easter holidays is an experience of a lifetime: from north to south, cities and towns throughout the Peninsula are celebrating during this time, with processions, religious rites, holy representations, sagre or food fairs, and folkloristic traditions that center around the Passion of the Christ.
Holy Week marks several important events for the Christian faith:
the Last Supper, the Washing of the Disciples’ Feet, Jesus in the
Garden of Gethsemane, the kiss of Judas, the Calvary, the death of
Christ, Deposition, Burial and Resurrection.
On Maundy Thursday (on March 28th this year) is the evening dedicated to the Eucharistic Feast, with the Sepulchre or Tomb visits that take place in every parish (a reproduction of the tomb of Christ), in remembrance of the Last Supper. Good Friday,
then, is the day for mourning and sorrow, while the city streets are
illuminated with torches that procession along the Stations of the
Cross.
On Holy Saturday, at midnight, church bells announce
the Resurrection – moment of great joy that finally finds its
culmination on Sunday. After the long phase of Lent, the faithful eat
their Easter lamb, and enjoy candy eggs and dove-shaped sweets. The egg,
symbol of fertility, of life and its renewal, is strongly linked to
Easter and the beginning of spring, the blooming of nature.
Easter celebrations throughout the Bel Paese are many and diverse.
First off, in the north, Bormio (Sondrio)
offers a sort of atonement rite as part of its Easter tradition,
welcoming spring by blessing five lambs and holding races and contests
among the city’s quarters.
Moving to Italy’s central-north, Easter fun includes the game Punta e cul in Urbania (Pesaro) featuring the egg as protagonist and revolving around ancient peasant traditions. The Egg Sagra and Palio animate Tredozio (Province of Forlì) with games, battles, and parade floats. In Florence, rather, the dove is the protagonist of the famous Scoppio del Carro (Explosion of the Cart);
the Scoppio dates back to the time of the First Crusade. The cart is
led by white steers from Piazzale del Prato to the Duomo, and a dove
(actually a species of pigeon in this case) lights the fireworks
contained in the cart. Legend has it that if the explosion goes off
without a hitch, the year ahead will be a good one for Florence!
Further south, in Sulmona (Abruzzo), the rite of Medieval origin, “Madonna che scappa”
(lit. the fleeing Madonna) is a local favorite celebrated between the
Roman aqueduct and Monte Marrone (in the Maiella National Park). It is a
merry and festive procession that runs through the city streets,
accompanied by the pealing of church bells and the colors and lights of
fireworks.Holy Week celebrations are also quite characteristic (and of ancient origin) in the islands of Naples Bay, Procida and Ischia. Particularly,
on Ischia the Run of the Angel in Forio dates back to 1600, and
reenacts the meeting between the Virgin and her Resurrected Son.
In the heel of Italy’s boot, Apulia
the Holy Week as celebrated in Ruvo di Puglia (Bari) is rich in charm,
with evocative parades and processions that go as far back as c.
1600.aratteristica anche la settimana Santa nelle due isole del Meanwhile, in the toe, Calabria, folk traditions predominate, like those in Civita and Frascineto,
where the Vallje, or Arbresh folk dances and songs fill the air. The
arbëreshë songs, in Albanian dialect, were first composed in the 1800s.
They are also sung during the Good Friday procession in Spezzano Albanese (Cosenza).
Then, the Holy Week rites of Sardinia are rather suggestive, and among the most peculiar are the Scrocifissione in Oliena (Nuoro),
in which men and women search for the Resurrected Christ, stopping at
all the area churches everyday until Saturday, when a statue of Christ
is found.
Of course, Sicily also
participates in Easter holiday rites deriving from its own local and
longstanding customs and traditions. Pilgrimages and processions of
people and animals in mask make their way through the city streets. Much
of the population takes part in the parades and holy representations.
Visitors should witness the rites in existence since the Spanish
domination over Enna, as well as La Real Maestranza procession in Caltanissetta, the Procession of the Mysteries in Trapani, and the celebrations in Prizzo and Adrano, in which the masks of Death and Demons make their appearances.
Source: italia.it
published: 2013-03-12