ADVENT! Adveniat regnum tuum!

Transcription

ADVENT! Adveniat regnum tuum!
 ADVENT!
Adveniat regnum tuum!
What a classic time in the Liturgical Year. We
celebrate liturgically what we do so often
each day of our lives…We wait! We wait!
We wait! “Come, Lord Jesus!”
Orchard Street number 97 was one step of this journey; The
Tenement Museum! Sitting in one of the kitchens of the
apartments [having lived in a N.Y.C. tenement apartment] many
memories stirred; flooded my conscious mind…reverence,
idealism, innocence filled my memory bytes.
Then of course on to the gift shop! Grazing the meadow of the
shop I came upon a colorfully decorated book cover called: THE
MADONNA OF 115TH STREET, La Madonna del Carmine. Again
a shower of memories poured into my mind and heart; cultural,
colorful, continuous images of La Madonna! Processions,
Panegyrics, Provolone, Gambling, Papier Mache, Pizza, Pasta,
Candles, Scapulars, Banners, Decorations!
Women dressed in black; hair pulled back into a bun;
barefooted with candles as tall as they were and ME trailing
along. The magnificent Gothic Church [built by the people
themselves] filled to overflowing capacity eying the men
removing La Mama from her high throne above the “high”
altar. I can still hear the joyful gasp that rose from the throats of
the people: “La Madonna will walk with us in our streets”;
money pinned to her quite ornate clothing: A ‘Fellini-esque’
epoch cinema possibility equaling the spaghetti dinner on the
streets of Rome.
This “sitz en leben” opportunity opened my mind to the original
goodness graciously offered by my Creator. IMAGINE!!
Here is this demure lady of Nazareth…full of God’s grace;
gentle lady whose only jewel she ever bore was her first and
only born son, Jesus the Christ. Worthy of all crowns! On 115th
Street she wore a tiara made from the offerings of the poor
women of East Harlem; real hair covered her plaster head;
carried atop a giglio with everyone singing, praying and
honoring the Mother of their Savior. In the procession were
Fiorello La Guardia, Vito Marcantonio [a socialist catholic], the
Faranga brothers; each born in that neighborhood.
This spectacle opened the souls of the poor waiting for their
deliverance. Mary was, for them, a new Moses. Simply by
raising his hands he parted the Red Sea bringing liberation to
the slaves of the Egyptians. Miriam, by her YES; parted the
clouds and the dew of our Freedom became flesh. A woman, a
hero for the people of East Harlem, who believed women,
belonged at home! Mary, in this exaggerated image, becomes
the source of strength for her people while they waited. Her
YES; resounding on the street, in the homes. Could there be a
greater honor?
La Madonna del Carmine brought to her people innocence and
passion; idealism and realism; reverence and sophistication.
And the people called out with one voice: “VIVA LA
MADONNA!”
Is her YES also asked of us this Advent of expectation? Maria,
llena de gratia!
Philip Fabiano, O.F.M. Cap.
“Let the clouds rain
down the Just One
and the earth bring
forth the Son!
Drop down ye dew
from the Heavens!”
[Liturgy of the Hours]
The Dance Continues
The Dance of the Giglio Feast in East Harlem was one of the original
Giglio feasts held in the United States back in the early 1900's. The roots
of this feast differ somewhat from their brethren feasts in the United
States in that the descendants of this feast originated from the town of
Brusciano, Italy which is located several miles from Nola, Italy.
In the town of Brusciano, six Gigli are danced each year in honor of San
Antonio, the town's patron saint. As the story goes, in 1875 a gentleman
named Francisco Vivolo made a vow to San Antonio to erect and dance a
Giglio in his honor like they do each year in Nola, if his deathly ill son
miraculously recovered. Needless to say, Francisco's prayers were
answered and the Dance of the Giglio was born in Brusciano, still
carrying on today.
Descendants of Francesco Vivolo and others from the town of Brusciano
settled in East Harlem shortly after the turn of the 1900’s and started a
Dance of the Giglio feast annually in honor of San Antonio. This tradition
took place on 106th Street until 1955. In 1957, the feast was moved to
108th Street where it remained until 1971.
From 1971 through 1999, no Dance of the Giglio Feast took place in East
Harlem. Then in 2000, the Dance of the Giglio feast returned and was
held on 115th Street in cooperation with the Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Church. A Giglio was erected and danced on Sunday 16 July 2000 for
the first time in 29 years that a Giglio was danced in East Harlem.
Building on the success of the previous year, 2001 saw the return of the
Dance of the Giglio in East Harlem.
The 2002 Our Lady of Mt Carmel feast was truly a spectacular event.
The feast was lengthened to 12 days from Wednesday, 10 July 2002
through Giglio Sunday, 21 July 2002. The Dance of the Giglio in East
Harlem was held the last day of the feast on 115th Street between 1st
and Pleasant Avenues.
The Madonna of 115th Street
Faith and Community in Italian Harlem, 1880–1950
Awarded the Alpha Sigma Nu National Book Prize for outstanding book in the humanities sponsored by Jesuit
colleges and universities in the United States Winner of the 1986 John Gilmary Shea Prize given by the American
Catholic Historical Association.
In a masterful evocation of Italian Harlem and the men and women who lived there, Robert Orsi examines how
the annual Festa of the Madonna of 115th Street both influenced and reflected the lives of the celebrants. His
prize-winning book offers a new perspective on lived religion, the place of religion in the everyday lives of men,
women, and children, the experiences of immigration and community formation, and American Catholicism. This
edition includes a new introduction by the author that outlines both the changes that Italian Harlem has
undergone in recent years and significant shifts in the field of religious history.