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Read published article at Italian Notebook
I wound my way up the narrow road towards the tiny, secluded sanctuary of S. Lucia in Sassinoro. I was on my way to meet Giovanna, a volunteer in the shrine’s wee gift shop. She and her husband Giorgio were part of the family I was researching for a heritage tour.
Like many holy places, the legend surrounding S. Lucia in Sassinoro began in the spring of 1600 as a shepherd’s tale. A number of sheep had been mysteriously disappearing and just as mysteriously reappearing again after a few minutes, so the shepherds decided to follow the flock as they grazed. They discovered that the animals were going in and out of a split in the rocky face of the mountain. They squeezed through the narrow crack and made their way into the hillside until they reached a grotto where they were suddenly blinded by the appearance of a beautiful woman and a handsome young man bathed in shimmering light.
They ran home to tell of their miraculous encounter and returned with the town priest to verify the account. In the grotto they found a statue of S. Lucia and S. Michele! The town fathers decided to erect a place of worship on the spot and construction of the sanctuary began in 1622 and was completed in 1643.
Today this quaint little church nestles quietly into the mountain above the village of Sassinoro. But once inside, the feeling becomes one of awe as the apse is dramatically set into the huge overhanging face of the grotto. It is still possible to squeeze through the original path which the shepherds took on all fours, to view the ancient statues of S. Lucia and S. Michele.
S. Lucia is the patron saint of the blind and a small room off the side of the church is filled with reliquaries containing silver ex-votos donated by faithful worshipers who have regained their sight after praying to her.
A Circus Comes to Sassinoro
On the day of my visit to the sanctuary, I had an experience so glorious in its absurdity that it had to be documented and shared.
While admiring the inside of the church of S. Lucia in Sassinoro, my host Giovanna pointed out the last-minute preparations being made for a wedding that was to take place shortly: the bride and groom’s seats and pew had been padded with white satin drapery; the central aisle carpeted with a white runner and strewn carefully with orange rose petals. Bouquets of yellow flowers decorated the pews on either side of the carpet, creating a strong visual perspective towards the magnificent, suspended cross with its incredible, rocky backdrop.
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As we walked out into the dappled sunlight I began to say my goodbyes, but my eyes were drawn to a strange apparition on the far side of the courtyard, standing directly opposite a white marble statue of Padre Pio. Like the glimmering image of St. Michael in the dark grotto of 1600, a young man stood, emanating a blinding light. I had to blinked twice to make sure my eyes weren’t deceiving me.
He was olive-skinned and decked from head to toe in shades of cream and white. A diamond-studded clasp closed the lapels of a jacket made out of what seemed to be upholstery fabric; a smaller pin glinted at his throat in place of a tie. While the unhemmed pants billowed out over his cream-coloured boots, a jauntily-held white cane brought my gaze back to ruffled shirt-cuffs peaking out from the jacket sleeves. The whole thing was topped off by a top hat studded with sequins.
Could this be St. Barnum or Bailey, I wondered, or was it a character out of a Savoyard production of Gilbert & Sullivan? The total effect was of a ring-leader at a circus and I watched, tranfixed, to see whether he would pull a rabbit out of his hat.
“Oh my God”, I gasped slowly, “It’s the groom!”
Two considertions broke into my mind. What kind of person could have suggested this bizarre outfit and had the young man had to pay for it?
At that moment the bride’s entourage pulled up at the the gate below, cars piling up behind the her 10-meter limousine which huffed to a halt at the bottom of the stairs. Out spilled a cresting wave of white tulle.
This gal must have been a long-standing member of the congregation of S. Lucia because the lenses of her glasses were thick as bottle-bottoms. Her father – also dressed in white, but with an interesting shade of purple shirt and tie – helped her out of the car and proudly led her up the stairs. Not to be outdone, her mother wore a red strapless gown while her aunt videoed the procession from behind in a tight-fitting black dress with a striking cleavage. Someone at the top of the steps shouted down to the bride as she bravely navigated the stairs that she was lifting her dress too high for decency…
The riotous assembly regrouped in the sunlit churchyard, as the four-year-old bridesmaid augustly took her place behind the couple and holding the end of veil in her tiny hands.
Padre Pio, unperturbed by the garish show, calmly blessed everyone as they entered into the shadows of the church.