At 86, St. Andrew’s Helper Readies Another Fest
by Thomas MacMillan | June 25, 2009 12:09 PM | Permalink | Comments (1)
This weekend, thanks to over 30 years of effort by Theresa Argento, New Haven will become more Amalfitani than Amalfi.
Since 1975, Argento has been organizing the annual St. Andrew Festival in Wooster Square, a celebration of the patron saint of the coastal town of Amalfi, Italy, where many New Haven families originally came from.
The festival of food and music — which opens Thursday night and runs through Sunday — is an exact replica of the events that happen in Amalfi every year in June, down to the clothes that participants wear. The Wooster Square celebration is so accurate, and so well attended, that a visiting Amalfitani priest once told Argento that the New Haven festival might surpass the original.
On Tuesday afternoon, Argento, who’s 86, was at home in the Annex neighborhood, making last-minute phone calls to Italian pastry shops and tying up the loose ends before the start of the festival on Thursday evening. The summer celebration of St. Andrew has been one of the biggest events of the year for Argento ever since she was a small child. Argento’s mother, who came to New Haven from Amalfi when she was 16, made sure that her children celebrated the holiday, which was as important as Christmas to the family.
Argento has spent her adult life ensuring that the tradition continues. In the process, she has helped to bring together the sizable local Amalfitani community. There are more individuals in the Greater New Haven area claiming Amalfatani descent than there are in Amalfi, Argento said.
The Amalfitani community took root in New Haven when immigrants came from Amalfi to work in New Haven’s factories, particularly the Sargent Company, Argento said. Representatives from Sargent went to Italy in the early 1900s and recruited workers from Amalfi. “They came through Ellis Island with a tag that said ‘New Haven.’”
Argento’s father came when he was 4 years old, her mother when she was 16. “The love for Amalfi came from my mother,” Argento said. It was Argento’s mother who taught her the story of the miracle of St. Andrew.
St. Andrew spent his life preaching in Asia Minor, in Greece and Turkey, and his remains were kept in Constantinople. After the sacking of Constantinople in 1208, St. Andrew’s relics were taken to Amalfi. Later, Argento said, “the Turks were invading Amalfi to claim the bones of St. Andrew.” The Amalfitani fleet was vastly outnumbered by the Turkish ships, and it looked like certain defeat. But then came the miracle.
“There was an elderly man on the shores of Amalfi,” Argento said. “And he was whittling a stick.” The shavings fell from his knife and into the sea, creating a fierce “tempest” that drowned the Turkish fleet. The miracle is said to have happened on June 27, which is still the day that it’s celebrated in Amalfi.
The Wooster Square festival is a four-day affair, starting on Thursday. “We have a little parade,” Argento said. After the parade through Wooster Square, the statue of St. Andrew is unveiled.
“Friday we have a nice band that comes in,” Argento continued. See a full schedule here.
“Saturday is a big night. We have Neopolitan night,” she said. “We have Italian music. Just a nice evening.”
Sunday is the processional. “We march around Wooster Square,” Argento said. Men take turns carrying the pewter statue of St Andrew, “which is very heavy.” Women wear white and men wear red jackets, just as it’s done in Amalfi.
“Whatever they do there, we do here,” Argento said. She told the story of the Amalfitani priest who was so impressed by his visit to a New Haven St. Andrew celebration.
“So that’s a feather in our cap,” she said proudly.
Every day of the festival is filled with traditional Italian food. Opening a three-ring binder, Argento listed off the many vendors she’s lined up for the weekend. “Sausage and peppers… fried fish… torron… prochetti… penne a la vodka… italian ice… fried dough. That’s very popular… peaches in wine. It’s delicious.”
“To me this is like a reunion,” Argento said. She explained how the Amalfitani community in Wooster Square was broken up by the construction of the highway in the 1960s. That’s when Argento was forced to move to the Annex neighborhood and her father, Frank Carrano, lost his Wooster Square market. “It was terrible. Really terrible,” said Argento (pictured looking at photos of her father’s market).
The annual St. Andrew Festival now serves to bring together the Amalfitani families who moved out of Wooster Square when the highway was built, buying homes in East Haven, North Haven, and West Haven.
At 86, Argento has no intention of stepping down as an organizer of the annual festival. But she’s pleased to see that the traditions are catching on with young people. “We’re getting the younger generations interested. It’s wonderful.”
“It’s just in our blood,” Argento said. “I think in life you have to have something to bring the family together.”
Share this story
Comments
Posted by: Barbara Lamb | June 25, 2009 1:22 PM
Many Thanks to Theresa for all that she does to keep alive the history and heritage of the Amalfitani's presence in New Haven for all of us -- not only through this annual traditional festival (and all that great food!) for but her tireless efforts on behalf of New Haven Sister Cities program, as well. New Haven is so lucky to have such a woman with so much pride and energy.
Sections
Neighborhood News
Special Sections
Legal Notices
Some Favorite Sites
- 5 Snacks After 10
- Abram Katz
- African independent
- At Risk for HD
- Back To Basics
- Branford Eagle
- Business NH
- CT Business Litig
- CT Energy Blog
- CT Enviro Headlines
- CT Green Scene
- CT Law Tribune
- CT Local Politics
- CT News Junkie
- CTV
- ChiTown Daily News
- Conn Art Scene
- Cornwall-On-Hudson
- Crosscut
- Design New Haven
- Gotham Gazette
- Josiah Brown
- Karman Turn
- La Voz Hispana
- Laurel Club
- Len's Lens
- Magrisso Forte
- Media Attache
- Media Nation
- Medical Intelligence
- Middletown Eye
- MinnPost
- My Left Nutmeg
- NBC 30
- NH Advocate
- NH Register
- NH Review of Books
- Northampton Media
- OneWorld
- Only In Bridgeport
- Oral History Project
- Pittsburgh Dish
- Reddit NH
- See Click Fix
- Smartpill Design
- SoWhay Sonata
- St. Louis Beacon
- Tom Ficklin
- VT Digger
- Valley Independent Sentinel
- Voice of SD
- WFSB-TV
- WPKN Today
- WTNH
- Yale Daily News
- barista
Government/ Community Links
- ALSO-Cornerstone
- Advocate Calendar
- Ald. Meetings
- All Our Kin
- Alliance Theatre
- Arts & Ideas
- Arts Council
- Artspace
- Bar Assn.
- Beth El Keser Israel
- Bikur Cholim
- Bioregional Group
- Birthright
- BlackinCT
- Boys & Girls Club
- CCA
- CCNE
- CTRIBAT
- Chamber of Commerce
- Children's Museum
- City Point
- City of New Haven
- CitySeed
- Citywide Youth
- Columbus House
- Community Loan Fund
- Community Mediation
- ConnCAN
- DESK
- Dariba Referrals
- Data Haven
- Domestic Violence Srvcs.
- Election Volunteers
- Elm City Cycling
- Elm Shakespeare
- Empower NH
- Ezra Academy
- Fellowship Place
- Food Bank
- Friends of East Rock Park
- GAVA
- Habitat For Humanity
- Halsey Associates
- Hill Health
- Hilltop Brigade
- IRIS
- Info New Haven
- Jewish Federation
- Job Finder
- Junta
- LEAP
- Leeway
- Mary Wade
- Music Haven
- NH Land Trust
- NH Museum
- NH Safe Streets
- NH Scholarship Fund
- NH Youth Soccer
- NH/ Leon Sister City
- NHCAN
- Neighborhood Music School
- New Haven 828
- New Haven Reads
- New Life Corp.
- PAR Newsletter
- Parents Available to Help
- Planned Parenthood
- Police
- Preservation Trust
- Public Allies CT
- Public Library
- Public Schools
- Public Works
- ROOF
- Rail Trains Ecology
- Register Calendar
- Rotary
- SAMA
- STRIVE-New Haven
- Sister Cities
- Social Media Club
- Solar Youth
- Soul-O-Ettes
- South Central Behavioral Health Network
- Squash Haven
- Temple Emanuel
- United Way
- Upper State Street Association
- Urban Design League
- Urban Resources Initiative
- Visiting Nurse Association of South Central Connecticut
- W'ville Synagogue
- W. Square Blockwatch
- WalkBIkeCT
- Westville Chabad
- Westville Renaissance
- Wooster Sq MT
- Workforce Alliance
- Yale Events
- Yeshiva NH Shul
- Yeshiva of NH
- Youth Continuum
Flyerboard
Sponsors
N.H.I. Site Design & Development
NHI Store
Buy New Haven Independent Stuff
News Feed
Movable Type 3.35