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John D. Calandra Italian American
Institute and the Italian American Museum and Queens College/(CUNY) presented The Black Madonna of East 13th Street: Italian American Religious Devotion in the
East Village on Monday, September 8, 2003 Il Covo dell'Est 210 Avenue A (corner of East 13th Street) Manhattan
On September 8, 1905, in Manhattan's Lower
East Side, immigrants from Patti (Messina province), Sicily celebrated their
first feast in honor of the Madonna del Tindari, one of numerous miraculously
powerful black madonnas venerated throughout Italy. The following year, they formed the mutual aid association “Il
Comitato Pattese alla Vergine SS. del Tindari.” In 1913, the group established a chapel at
447 East 13th Street, between First Avenue and Avenue A, where a stucco
statue of Madonna was on display. I.
J. Isola, writing for the W.P.A. in 1936, noted: “The New York Black Madonna
is credited by believers, with possessing the miraculous curative powers of
the original, as is attested by the many votive offerings at her shrine[,] .
. . in semblance of cures received on different parts of the body, such as
arms, legs, hands, breasts, etc.” The Sicilian American residents diminished as did the local devotion to the Black Madonna. In 1987, the lay religious society was dissolved and the statue was given to a New Jersey family who had attended the annual feast since the mid-1930s. The building which once housed the social club-cum-chapel is now a bar. Please join us for cocktails at the
restaurant Il Covo dell'Est to commemorate this history of Italian American
life and religious devotion in the East Village. Program:
Please call (212)
642-2048 to make reservations. [Return to the Academic & Cultural Programs page.] |