Po
Boy Views
By
Phil
LaMancusa
Saint
Joe Street Cred
Or
Blessed
Be
“Jesus, Mary and
Joseph!” Big Red would yell in
frustration when, as a kid, I had done something particularly dim-witted; and
face it, often times stuff I did as a youngster was considered dumb. Of course,
I saw myself as clever, smart and extremely witty; others around me, when not
considering that I was just another pretty face, believed I was as dim as a box
of rocks; a tree stump; a sack of hammers; a Brillo pad. You get the picture.
I was raised in the Catholic religion, which was even
then losing parishioners faster than a sinking ship; my family was intractable
in their loyalty and all the children were subjected to a fair amount of
religious instruction, coming away with scars to prove it.
Be that as it may; picture a younger me mulling over the
story of Jesus and Mary being ferried around by this guy, this carpenter, this
fatherly figure to a savant savior child, born of a virgin who, after the kid
kicks money lenders out of the temple, totally disappears from the gospels. Who
is this guy? Where did he go?
Where did he come from is more like the question; some
writings say that a man named Joseph was married to the virgin, before she gave
birth. Some recount a Joseph of Arimathea, purportedly Mary’s Uncle, a disciple
and spreader of the gospel into Britain. He is not the Saint; he’s the guy that
paid for the tomb to house the so called dead body of the thirty-three year old
King of the Jews. I think it was the first one that became the saint because he
brought the mother and son through trials and tribulations and taught the kid
how to use a hammer.
I grew up Catholic, we looked up to Saint Joseph; I was
raised Italian, we celebrated Saint Joseph’s Day. I wound up in New Orleans
where Catholic Italians, especially the Sicilians, would take a bullet for
Saint Joe. Growing up, we couldn’t have explained
St. Joe if our ice cream money depended on it; my question is still: who is
this guy?
Let’s go with what we know and what’s been told to us.
Saint Joseph’s Day is March 19th, every year. In New Orleans we
celebrate with altars of food and public meals. We make special dishes, savory
and sweet. We essentially pay back St. Joe for all his blessings bestowed upon
us during the year. March 19th:
payback time; the job we got, the school that our kid got accepted to, the
pregnancy that did (or didn’t) happen, business deals, living arrangements,
debts paid or forgiven, blood unshed. ‘Thank
you Saint Joseph, I will build an altar of food, donate it to the less
fortunate and invite strangers to eat at my table’. Churches, homes and
businesses participate; it’s during the Lenten season and so there’s no red-blooded
animals consumed.
Here’s what we’re told: Saint Joseph is the Saint of the
everyman, the patron of unwed mothers, a model for fathers, protector of
children, keeper of secrets, married to that blessed mother (after she became preggo) and the one who
gives us strength when we are sick and/or leaving this earthly coil. He is
considered the legal (not spiritual) father of Jesus. Chief David Montana once
explained to me why the Mardi Gras Indians came out on St. Joe’s Day: “because
he was black!” Take your pick; I’m only here for lunch.
Saint Joseph is considered patron of the universal church
of Catholicism; the Sicilians believe that he saved them from starvation by
giving them the fava bean and some believe that if you want to sell your house
you plant a statue of St. Joseph, head first, in your back yard. I’m a fan and
look forward to St. Joe’s Day for the cookies (sesame and fig) if nothing else.
Logistically Saint Joseph and Saint Patrick days are
March 19th and 17th; there’s not enough Italians or Irish
in New Orleans to have enough participants to throw individual parades, so they
combine them. Correct me if I’m wrong, that’s my story. So, here come the two
cultures parading; Irish giving potatoes and cabbages as gifts and Italians
trading flowers for kisses. It’s a good day for Italians.
On March 19th I go to whatever Catholic church
is nearby and I am served, sometimes up to a dozen different morsels of lunch
(of course, pasta rules) with lemonade and/or sweet tea; I’m as happy as a
clam. I donate money, light candles and generally feel part of the family of
man (and woman) all in the name of this guy who heard God’s voice and did what
he was told. I’d like to think that he held down the fort with the lovely Mary
while ‘his son’ went traveling for 18 years preparing for his ministry and
eventual execution.
Back to the day of lunch: because I have greased the
celebratory wheels I’m given a little
paper bag of goodies containing a prayer card, cookies, a blessed fava bean and
a slice of French bread. I bring that home (after eating the cookies) and place
it on my home altar; I put the fava bean in my wallet to bring me luck and
money during the next year. The significance of the bread has something to do
with casting bread upon waters to calm them. Here, we believe that the bread is
used to ward off hurricanes; that’s correct, when a storm is approaching we
take that slice of bread and throw is out our back widow and the tempest will
pass us by. It works too (but not for ‘outer bands’). For the sake of St.
Joseph we all remember that we’re all part of the same tribe; at lunch we say
to ourselves “welcome home and thank you Joe”.
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