Unless you’re Italian or trying to sell a house, you may not be
aware that today is Saint Joseph’s Day.
You remember
Joseph? Husband of Mary? Taught Jesus everything he knew about carpentry and
joinery?
Yeah, that’s the sad tale. Poor guy is always losing out: in the
Nativity, it’s all the Madonna and the kid; in cursing it’s always
Jesus-Mary-and-Joseph; in March it’s always Saint Patrick.
Joseph is the
patron of, among others, the Church Universal, workers, families, engineers,
the dying, Canada, confectioners, travelers, those in doubt, cabinetmakers,
Korea and Vatican II. Also of house sellers and hunters,
which should make him a pretty busy fellow these days.
Today is his
official feast day—celebrated widely in Italian communities around the world
with altars decorated with flowers, limes, candles, wine, breads, cookies,
pastries and other symbols of the good life. This is of particular
importance when you consider that Saint Joseph’s Day usually falls in Lent,
when consumption is constricted.
(There’s another
day, 1 May, dedicated to Saint Joseph the Worker; but that was invented in 1955
by Pope Pius XII to counter the godless communist/union/laborer May Day
holiday, so you can fuggedaboutit.)
What I remember
about Saint Joseph’s Day is that it’s when the swallows come back to
Capistrano—that’s the Mission of San Juan Capistrano, in the eponymous town in
Orange County, California. Turns out that the swallows usually show up a couple
of days on one side or another of 19 March, but everyone turns a blind eye to
those little discrepancies and enjoys the hell out of the miracle of
the swallows.
There are decades
of stories about
how Saint Joe helps the desperate sell their homes: you bury a
(plastic/stone/wooden) statue of the saint (head up/head/down/horizontal) in
your (front/back/side) yard and Bob’s your uncle—the house is sold.
You can buy
purpose-made statues for precisely this use from a variety of sources both on and off
line, including from some realtors.
No clue as to how
the saint may help home buyers, unless there’s some karmic connection that his
statue in your yard attracts exactly the right buyers for this house.
At any rate—Saint
Patrick gets all the good press for saints in March. You might want to expand
your hagiology with the holy father in these parlous times.
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