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Christmas in Sicily

 

Christmas celebrations in Sicily begin in earnest on 8th December (just over a month away), when families traditionally start decorating their homes for the festive season. While Christmas trees are now common, it was only during the 2nd World War, during the Allied occupation that they first became popular.

Perhaps the best thing about spending Christmas in Sicily is that you don't have to trek off to a particular locality. Even the smallest towns have their own traditions, all essentially Christian in tone. Just seek out the chiesa madre (mother church) or cathedral in the old part of town to see the local interpretation of the Nativity. In Palermo alone a dozen churches offer scenes among the world's best. (Only Naples can be said to rival Palermo's.) Though we've pictured here an icon of the Nativity, the manger scene is a more common Christmas sight in Sicily.

A favorite (and very "commercial") Italian Christmas treat nowadays is panettone, a rather bland bread cake, but it's not Sicilian and, truth be told, not even very traditional. The real Sicilian winter cake is something tastier called buccellato, a kind of big round cookie filled with almonds, pistachios, figs and other dried fruits, a little like Tuscan panforte or England's plum pudding except for the delicious crust. And real Sicilian eggnog (zabaglione) is made with Marsala wine.

Contrary to widespread belief, torrone is not really a Christmas candy, but in Sicily it's sold in the cooler months when it is less likely to melt.

Foreign visitors (especially Americans and Canadians, it seems) are sometimes surprised to see Christmas trees in Sicily. They became popular here during the Allied occupation (1943-1945). Artificial trees are what most people buy. Most of the small (live) pine trees sold in Palermo and Catania come from Germany or Austria, but a few specimens of the elusive, endangered Nebrodi Fir flourish in the Madonie and Nebrodi mountains. Traditionally, the feast of the Immaculate Conception (8 December) is when Italians erect, decorate or light Christmas trees.

The Sicilian Christmas season begins unofficially in late November. This is not just a commercial trend --though that certainly exists in Italy-- but also an ecclesiastical one. For example, Monreale's annual holy music week of concerts in its splendid Byzantine cathedral takes place in November just before Roman Catholic "Advent." (the Christian season beginning with the fourth Sunday before Christmas Day). For most Italians, Saint Martin's Day (11 November) is too early to think about Christmas, and considered by many Sicilians to signal little more than cooler nights. People refer to "Saint Martin's Summer" if it is still summery in early November, and that is often the case. Christmas is a great time to visit Sicily.

 

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