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Is it already
Christmas?
In any event, the main Christmas street in Naples is via San Gregorio Armeno (photo, left), and it is now up and open for business weeks before the holiday. It is 75 uphill yards of Christmas trinkets, knick-knacks, gew-gaws and gim-crackery (with some paraphernalia thrown in). Most of the stuff that people buy is meant to fit into the traditional wherewithal for the Neapolitan manger scene, the creche, called presepe in Italian. Thus, one buys small figurines of the Holy Family, the Christ Child, the Three Wise Men, various shepherds and livestock, and a galaxy of stars of Bethlehem. Many families, of course, already have a handed down perhaps over generations and are very picky about the items they add to the scene; a finely wrought ceramic and wooden angel, fine, but a plastic Christ Child made in China, no. You can also pick up new slabs of cork (harvested from woods on the island of Sardinia) if you are of a mind to resculpt the entire tableau from scratch. The pedestrian traffic on via San
Gregorio Armeno is already impressive. You can,
however, still lollygag up and down the street.
A few weeks from now, ultimate pedestrian
gridlock will be reached and you will stand in
place and simply wait for Christmas 2005 to roll
around and hope that someone feeds you
occasionally. Ideally, just before that frozen
moment is reached, there are a few days of slow,
tectonic-like movement when you can wedge
yourself into a knot of fellow travellers, lift
your feet up off the ground and simply be
carried along as if you were on one of those
rolling walkways at airports. Last year, the
city toyed with the idea of making via San
Gregorio Armeno a one-way street for pedestrians
at this time of year. This, in a city where you
can't even get motorists to obey one-way traffic
signs. The globalization of the holiday is
total. At the top of the street, near the
intersection of via dei Tribunale, there
is a woman hawking her wares to a recording of
"Jingle Bells" that makes one nostalgic for the
dulcet euphony of any ten cell-phones going off
at once. The stooped old
crone, the Befana,
who rewards children on the day of the Epiphany
(Jan. 6), is now depicted flying around on a
broomstick, something that never would have
occurred to anyone here before Halloween was
imported. Pictures of Santa Claus abound, as do
Christmas trees, neither of which are part of
the traditional Neapolitan Christmas. Can you
imagine a small figurine of Bing Crosby, as the
fourth Wise Man, singing White Christmas?
Did I just make that up? Don't bet on it. |