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La Befana (the Christmas witch)

 Yes, in Italy , we celebrate La Befana ( the Christmas witch) on the 6th of January, and it marks the end of Christmas festivities.

But in typical Italian style, it does so with a bang. We exchange gifts, visit little traditional markets that trail off from those usually larger ones prepared for Christmas, and gather, once again, around gargantuan amounts of delicious food.

If you are religious, this is the day you celebrate the coming of the Wise Men to Bethlehem and you place their statuettes –usually along with that of a camel– into your presepeIf you are a child, you can expect gift awaiting for you on the morning of the 6th. They may be in a stocking, or by the fireplace, but you can bet you’ll get them. That old loveable lady never fails to please her beloved kids. There are many version of Santa Claus around the world, and Befana is an Italian ‘version’ of it.

Here comes one of my pindaric flights into childhood memories.As a kid, la Befana would enter my thoughts pretty much straight after I unwrapped Gesù Bambino‘s gifts on the morning of the 25th.

With a type of accuracy and organization I was not to keep as an adult, I would mentally go through all that I did not get that morning under the tree, and select the type of gifts the Christmas witch was more likely to bring: yes, because you must know she is a poor lady, and cannot afford all the fancy stuff Gesù Bambino buys. Once this relatively complex process ended, I had to ask her for what I wanted. This usually happened around New Year’s and in a pretty simple way. I would go on my house balcony at night time and shout to the stars my gift list. I can guarantee you she would never fail to make me happy and bring me pretty much all I fancied.

befana
Look up and shout your wishlist to the sky: la Befana is listening! (by Aleksdem2 at depositphotos.com)

In my family, la Befana (Christmas witch)  always left her presents near the presepe.

My  grandparents lived in an attic apartment above us (the same apartment where I happily stay every time I go home now). We would end up having two presepi under the same roof and she had the habit to leave her presents at my grandparents’. We left the candy and everything small enough to fit inside a stocking and placed all the rest nicely around the presepe.

She would usually bring me books, colored pencils, perfumes and little toys, although one year I remember she made me very, very happy with one of those “Fashion Wheels” that used to be en vogue in the mid-80s, and you could create all those drawings of clothes with. She would bring oranges, dried figs, dates and peanuts. Candy was, however, her pièce de résistence, and it was not regular candy, but all the stuff you were less likely to get during the rest of the year: chocolate cigarettes antttd chewing gums (always banana flavor), sugar coal (in black, pink and white), torroncini and cri-cri, typical candies of Piedmont, consisting in a whole hazelnut surrounded by hazelnut chocolate and then covered in sugar sprinkles, always wrapped in shiny, colorful paper. What a feast, I would have for the following days!

One thing I never wondered about when I was a child was where the Befana came from. I just believed what I was told, that is, that she was a good witch that helped Gesù Bambino by delivering some of His gifts, especially the smaller ones: you know, it is not easy to carry large stuff on a broomstick.

It came as a bit of surprise, years and years later, to find out that the old lady on a broomstick had very ancient origins indeed and that she may be the vestige of a much older cult than that of the Befana itself…

befana, Christmas Witch
Christmas Witch: …la Befana vien di notte… (by jordygraph at depositphotos.com)

La Befana In Italy: history

The Christmas witch’s figure may have older origins than the Epifania festivity we usually associate her with. Her roots seem to lie in pre-Christian times and developed into a tradition of folklore and religious elements.

The Celts, once inhabiting the Northern regions of our country, introduced the figure of a female representation of nature celebrating her during the winter.

Nature, tired and empty at this very time of the year, needs rest before spring rejuvenates it and brings food and sustenance to the world. Old lady brings gifts of food and seeds to help humanity survive during winter rest.

From this Celtic representation of a tired, yet thoughtful and bound-to-be-born-again Mother Nature, La Befana has taken her shape and main appearance, which is, today, that of an old lady with a hunch, a big nose and a pointy chin, poorly dressed and perennially covered in sooth, as she gets into our homes through the chimney. Legends say that, on the night between the 5th and the 6th she flies above our roofs. She enters homes through the chimney to leave presents and candy in stockings while everyone is asleep. Good children will receive lovely gifts, whereas naughty ones will get only coal.

befana
Children don’t mind getting this type of coal in their stocking! (by nito103 at depositphotos.com)

A few more secrets…

Something that many of us do not know, is that the figure of the Befana is not only typical of Italy. Befana found in many cultures, from Normandy to Persia, Russia to Northern Africa. In all cases, she is a generous and benevolent figure, very likely to be associated to pre-Christian cults of the Mother Goddess, guardian of the hearth and the home. It comes as no surprise that the Befana enters homes through chimney, a symbol of connection between earth and skies.

The Christmas witch of Italian tradition, a Befana shaped by old country stories, is passed down by grandparents.

She would fill our stockings with dried fruits, nuts, chestnuts and small oranges, or coal, if we had been particularly naughty. Never one to be evil, though, the Befana‘s coal was always of the sweet, edible kind. The coal was once used to roast chestnuts left in the same stocking.

The Epifania or “la festa della Befana” in Italy

The beginning

I am sure there is some among you readers who has majored in English at University. If so, you may be familiar with the term “epiphany” and, in fact, you may still have nightmares about “Stephen Dedalus’ epiphany on the Malahide beach” in Joyce’s Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: I certainly still do… Anyway, if you are familiar with that, you may remember that the term epiphany comes from the Greek Epiphàneia and means, alas, revelation or illumination. It refers to the first human and godly manifestation of Jesus Christ to the Three Wise Kings, ten days after His birth, on the 6th of January. However, just as for the Befana herself, its celebration is rooted well into pre-Christian times: in fact, a similar feast was celebrate in Rome before the advent of Christianity itself.

At the very end of December, very much when we celebrate our Christmas today, the Romans would celebrate the Saturnalia, in honor of Saturn, the father of Jupiter hence creating power of all. In later times, the Saturnalia became also associated with the cult of the Sol Invictus and that, more in general, of the creating force of the Sun. After the generating gods, the Romans would celebrate, at the beginning of January, the domestic ones, the lari, protectors of the family and of its well being. The period in which we, today, celebrate the Epifania corresponds to that in which the Romans used to honor the Lari.

The beginning of January was a spiritually relevant time also in the East, where it was strictly related to the figure of Jesus. The Epiphàneia was instituted in 120 AD to remember the christening of Christ in the waters of the river Jordan, at the hand of John the Baptist. Very likely, the festivity fell in this particular period of the year because some early Christians sects believed the actual incarnation of the Word took place through the Christ christening and not at His birth.

If the festival was, at least initially, celebrated only by some, it soon was adopted officially by the eastern Church and it came to simbolize four essential moments of the life of Jesus: His birth, the coming of the Wise Men, His christening and the Caana miracle. In all four occasions it is an epiphàneia to be celebrated, a “manifestation”: that of the divine in the person of Jesus Christ.

The Epifania in the Western Church

The celebration of the Epiphàneia soon got popular in the West. The cult and celebration of the Sol Invictus, which used to conclude the Saturnalia, was extremely felt by people and, just as it happened for other festivals, it was absorbed within the practices of Christianity and transformed in an orthodox moment of worship; the Sol Invictus of the Romans, the god of life and light dispensed to all existence was transformed into the figure of Christ, who brought, according to the Church, the light of true spirituality and knowledge to Mankind. Early Christian iconography often portrays Christ with sunbeams surrounding His head and body, associating Him with the Sun.

epiphany
A depiction of the Roman “Sol Invictus” from Pessinus, in Asia Minor (third cenrury AD) (by Jastrow at wikimedia.org)

In the fourth century, the West attributed to the day of the Epifania another meaning, always of revelation, to add to those already highlighted by the Eastern Church. It became a symbol of the revelation of Jesus, hence of Christianity, to the world of paganism.

Certainly, there is much history, both factual and spiritual, behind the day of the Epiphany, and it is almost a pity so many of us who celebrate it ignore or forget the doctrinal relevance of the day. The figure of la Befana / Christmas witch, became its principal symbol, a figure of pagan origins, embodying a Christian feast, whose celebration became particularly relevant in popular tradition. Once again, as it often happens in Italy, history, religion and people’s habits mingle with one another and create that outstanding jewel that Italian culture is. The actual complexity of a feast such as the Epifaniaapparently so simple in its development, is sign of the wealth of the country’s cultural heritage, a heritage we Italians often forget or, even worse, disregard.

By Francesca Bezzone

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rey
3 years ago

you should put symbols associated with the holiday

I remember the Epiphany back in my country, Italy, when my brother and I would receive gifts from the local police station where our father worked when we were children.