Sicily takes Easter
very seriously. All over the island, in large towns and tiny
villages alike, processions weave their way through narrow streets,
central thoroughfares and piazzas until finally they arrive at the
local parish church or Cathedral.
Easter also signals
the arrival of Spring, and many pagan traditions that used to mark
the arrival of the "beautiful season" have been incorporated into
the religious festivities.
For food lovers,
Easter is a great time to come to Sicily: enticing
seasonal delicacies and gastronomic delights celebrate the bounty of
Primavera. It is the time for Martorana, or Pasta Reale, marzipan
confectionary that is delightfully shaped and painted to resemble
fruit of all types. With Easter being a time for celebration,
the Cassata, Sicily's signature cake, made of sweetened ricotta
chesse, marzipan and candied fruit, graces tables all over the
island. Fresh peas, fava beans and artichokes combine wonderfully in
"frittella", and the tuna fish season gets underway...
Returning to the
more sacred aspects of 'Pasqua', however, here are a few
interesting events to experience if you're visiting Sicily at Easter
and want to taste the atmosphere of age-old
traditions
In the west
Probably the most
renowned religious manifestations of devotion in Sicily are the "Mysteries" of Trapani on Good Friday, in which the
townsmen carry statues through the streets. Each statue represents
one of the stations of the cross and are all made by the various
local guilds. Thousands of Sicilians line the streets awaiting the
arrival of the Virgin Mary "in search" of her son. A similar
procession takes place in Caltanisetta on Maundy Thursday.
Erice
and
Busetto Palazzolo
both have evocative processions on Good Friday. At Erice, the
celebrations are similar to those at Trapani, with statues being
carried through the town, while at Busetto, there is a
wonderful costumed recreation of the Stations of the Cross.
Palermo and around
In Partanna-Mondello,
a suburb of Palermo, the Easter week is celebrated with costumed and
scripted recreations of Christ's arrival at Jerusalem (5.00pm on
Palm Sunday), the Last Supper (9.00pm on Maundy Thursday) and the
Stations of the Cross (11.00am on the Saturday before Easter
Sunday). Thousands of locals attend these events and the atmosphere
is one of great devotion.
Also of great
interest, though not only at Easter, is the mountain town of
Piana degli Albanesi just south of Palermo. As the
name suggests, Piana degli Albanesi was founded by Albanian
immigrants fleeing a Turkish invasion in 1488. Being somewhat
isolated, the town has managed to maintain much of its original
identity and many of its traditions, one of which is its Orthodox
Easter celebrations (it has been a Greek Orthodox Bishopric since
1937). On Palm Sunday, there is a procession through the streets to
mark Jesus' arrival in Jerusalem. Festivities continue all week
until Easter Sunday when the townsfolk put on their traditional 15th
Century costumes and hand out previously blessed red hand-painted
eggs. After Mass there is the procession of the Holy Veil, a piece
of cloth in which believers can make out the face of Christ.
Another option is a
trip to
San Martino delle Scale,
a small village hidden away in the mountains just behind Palermo.
Here, on Easter Monday, the monks of the Benedictine Monastery
celebrate Easter and the coming of Spring by freeing the birds they
have saved from the harsh mountain winter. The birds are kept in a
large specially built aviary and their release is part of a
tradition that goes back over 300 years. The arrival of Spring is
also celebrated with concerts, enormous floral arrangements and
Gregorian chant, all of which create a wonderful festive atmosphere.
On Palm Sunday,
Caccamo, a mountain town east of Palermo hosts a
marathon procession called "U
Signuruzzu a Cavaddu". At 9.00am the bells of the
many churches signal the commencement of proceedings and an altar
boy, riding a donkey, is accompanied through the streets by
the local band and 12 children dressed in red tunics, holding palm
fronds. For three hours, the troupe tours the town's churches,
receiving, at each one, a tumultuous welcome.
Meanwhile in
Prizzi, in the hills south of Palermo, a very
different event takes place on Easter Sunday -
The Dance of the Devils. Wearing red and black
satanic masks complete with horns and grotesque noses, a portion of
the townsfolk wreak havoc, constraining passers-by to buy them
drinks (a metaphor for stealing their souls). In the struggle that
ensues between good and evil, it is Christ and the Madonna who
triumph, along with other locals dressed as angels. During the
ensuing celebrations the devils are "forced" to get the drinks in
and "cannateddi", a typical Easter cake, is distributed.
In
Gangi, in the Madonie Mountains, the most important
day of the Easter calendar is Palm Sunday, which sees a procession
through the streets, with drummers, and members of the various
religious confraternities dressed in white tunics and coloured
cloaks, carrying specially created arrangements of palm fronds and
flowers. Mass in the Chiesa Madre is signalled by the drum
voluntary.
Catania and around
On Easter Sunday in
Adrano, on the south-west flanks of Mount Etna, the
triumph of good over evil - as in Prizzi - is celebrated with the "Diavolata".
In the central piazza a stage is erected and divided into two parts:
one devoted to Hell, inhabited by the Devil and five demons, and the
other to Heaven. The Diavolata is, in effect, a play in which an
angel battles against the Devil, trying to make him and his demons
say the words "Viva Maria". The costumes are colourful and there are
even some stage effects, such as smoke and fire. The outcome of the
struggle, seeing that it takes place on Easter Day, leaves none
surprised.
At
Bronte, on the western flanks of Mount Etna, Good
Friday and the Passion of Christ is celebrated with a heartfelt,
highly-charged costumed procession, re-enacting the Stations of the
Cross. Silence is expected from observers, and only the beating of
drums can be heard... A similar event takes place in
Caltagirone.
At
Forza d'Agro', just north of Taormina, on Easter
Monday, the locals continue an age-old tradition, including a
procession of holy oils, laurels, the distribution of home-made
bread called 'cuddure' and a small competition to choose the best
religious banner made out of laurel leaves.
In the south-east
Easter Sunday in
Modica
is characterised by the solemn procession of the "Madonna Vasa Vasa".
A statue of the Virgin Mary is carried around the town before
arriving at Piazza San Domenico where she encounters a statue of
Jesus and kisses him.
Just up the road in
Noto,
the week of Easter is celebrated with a series of processions
including one in the afternoon of Good Friday and another in the
morning of Easter Day. Similar events also take place in
Ragusa Ibla.
At
Scicli, on Palm Sunday an ancient statue of the
Madonna della Pieta' - discovered in around 1,000AD, after being
hidden from the Saracens for several hundred years - is transfered
from the Church of Santa Maria La Nova to the Church of Carmine.
If you're staying in
the south-east, you could also pop along to
Ferla, near Syracuse, on Holy Saturday. Here at
9.00pm the town's church bells signal the beginning of celebration
starting with a fireworks display. Church's are illuminated, the
town band plays and a procession begins. Some hardy souls continue
all through the night carrying Christ's body round the town in a
torch-lit vigil.
In
San Biagio Platani (in the province of Agrigento) on
Easter Sunday. Two religious factions deck the town in colourful
decorative arches made from all sorts of materials including
vegetables and cereals. Each group's work is prepared in absolute
secrecy during the weeks leading up to Easter and each attempts to
outdo the other. The competitive spirit is, however, just a backdrop
to the more important celebration of the resurrection of Christ.