At Fontanarossa feasts and fairs broke the
monotonous but serene life of the village with bright notes
of colour. The villagers waited first of all for the fairs (20
May and 19 September) that gathered in the “piazza”
(the main square) and in the next roads merchants coming with
their products and commodities from Bobbio, Ottone, Rovegno;
there was much animation, couples of oxen, donkeys, “manzette”
(young cows) carefully harnessed, so that the owners could cut
a fine figure. On those occasions boys could taste the “canestrelli”
(biscuits) (a penny the small ones, two the great ones, a Lire
the string), the only dessert they really knew, as the “focaccia”
was only for the day of St. Rocco and not for everyone. But
all the families, still the poorest, for the patron feast had
the rice cake (a savoury dish almost disappeared) and the delicious
“egg pudding”.
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The
feast of S. Rocco started to be celebrated around the
second half of the 1800 after the 1857 famous cholera
epidemic and drew a lot of people: the leit-motif was
religious or familiar, with the beautiful church magnificently
decorated, with the procession of the statue of the Saint
carried by hand and in competition by strong young fellows
that competed for this honour with offers to the church,
with the exhortations of the preachers, with the vespers
and finally with the ball and the fire crackers. The patron
Saint was first St. Stephen, represented in an ancient
statue; but it was too old and the priest decided to replace
it with the actual one that is preserved in the old church
placed in the cemetery. |
The procession took place on 3 August and
the statue was carried to the village and exposed to the veneration
of the believers invoking the intercession of the Protomartyr
for obtaining the desired rain on the fields. But this change
did not appeal to the villagers, that, after having waited in
vain for the rain in the August heat, protested against modern
people that had decided to abandon the old saint (good and indulgent)
choosing a too young saint, who did not know anything as he
had not experience (despite of this he was proclaimed Saint!!)
Just after the village feast, it was the harvest time, the crop
feast.
They had a great deal to do in those days; they hardly worked
in their yards where the crop was threshed by hand using beaters
and “verziele” rotated in the air by experienced
hands, hours and hours under the scorching sun, rhythmically
beating on the ears of the sheaves carefully placed in layers
on the floor carefully cleaned!
Later they had the first threshing machine by hand, always tiring
but quicker. After the return of Giovanni Mangini (Nicola) from
the America, the village took a big step forward: in fact he
bought the first threshing machine with a piston engine. It
was a great event because in few hours it completed the work
of many days. After the threshing, they organized a cheerful
lunch, often followed by a ball with choirs and dances up to
late evening. Untiring workers but Christian believers, the
Fonantarossesis spent the Sunday day at rest. After the holy
celebrations, many of them went to the patron feasts in the
near villages but girls had to come back not after the “Ave
Maria” of the evening! Some people enjoyed themselves
playing games of bowls while young people and girls preferred
walking up to “Avascieli” resting in the shade of
a great chestnut tree. Here they joked and sang and girls were
courted with all due respect. The attendance of the young people
to the crackers of St. Giovanni Battista day was particular
and absolute: the evening before they prepared a big pole around
which brushwoods and straw were piled to be set on fire the
night of 24 June: the bondfire lasted for a long time and the
sight of the other fires in the distance was really suggestive.
The “masquerade” for Carnival, today disappeared,
was a typical feast up to 80 years ago: particularly young people
wore animal skins, coloured dresses, enormous and funny masks;
in a group they went around the village collecting sweets and
money offered by the villagers.
They laughed, shouted, played rudimentary drums and rattles
and the noise (but not the happiness) stopped only when, late
in the evening, the collected foods was eaten together with
rice, wine and biting jokes.
Happy and joyful dances characterized the last day of Carnival
and the day of Half Lent: All the villagers without distinction
of age attended the ball. The Fontanarossesis, generally tall
and slender people, were good dancers and they were known in
the valley under the nickname of “dancers”. But
today things have changed and, except the day of St. Rocco,
these genuine and beautiful traditions only live in the memory
of our elders.
Eddi Biggi