Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Una Giornata Splendida


Walking through the streets of Naples, you breathe more than air.

The air is saturated with passion.  And with love.  The history of the city and its surrounding areas has created a culture and a language (because the Neapolitan dialect really is just that) so unique.  What I find striking, and most impressive, is how shared it is.  The elements of history, politics and language that make Naples what it is are clear, silently agreed upon, and nearly everyone is knowledgeable enough to discuss it with you.  They know their history impeccably well.  Better than most Americans, especially young Americans, know theirs. 

Despite the pride with which they watch the Italian national soccer team compete in international cups during the year, many Neapolitans will identify first and foremost with their city- not their country.  In fact, at dinner the other night, one of my uncles expressly stated that he isn’t Italian.  When I asked then what he was, he replied “Il Regno delle Due Sicilie”, or Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.  The city, as I have mentioned in an earlier post, was ruled by different monarchies throughout history.  Naples served as the capital- an important international city to which people traveled from all over the world.  It had wealth, prestige, and respect.

Things have changed.

Italy was unified in 1861.  For many people in Naples however, and in fact for many people in all of southern Italy, the term “Italian Unification” leaves a bad taste in their mouths.  From a southern Italian perspective, Italy was unified mostly by force, and little by desire.  The peninsula was home to a large range of territories with a variety of governing systems, languages and cultures, customs and traditions.  In fact, Metternich once referred to Italy as merely a “geographic expression”.  In the formative years leading up to 1861, there were many people for whom Italy, both the word and the idea that it could represent a unified state, meant nothing.

Although I’ve taken European history and have done some reading on the topic, I, personally, have a lot more to learn before I can form an opinion on the matter.  But I’m not explaining all of this to lead up to my opinion.  I’m explaining it all because without all of this Naples today would not be what it is.  The people would not be the same.  The passion, the unconditional love for their home, would not exist.  And that would be a shame.

Neapolitans, despite the hardship they have faced and continue to face, are immensely proud to be who they are, and from that pride comes a warmth and hospitality so unique, so natural and so inviting.  They want to share their history with you.  They want to share their culture, their cuisine, their way of life, and the beautiful Neapolitan sense of humor that I grew up around. 

Our day yesterday began at my aunt’s house in Varcaturo, which is something like a suburb of Naples, though not in the way Americans know suburbs.  (I’ve yet to see that kind of place here).  We took ‘la Cumana’ into the city.  La Cumana is sort of a cross between the subway and the Long Island Railroad.  It is like the subway in that it is dirty, covered in graffiti, with very little room to sit, and very, very hot.  But, unlike the subway and more like the LIRR, it is above ground, and comes from the outskirts of the city inwards, with the final stop being Montesanto, what I guess would be like a much smaller Penn Station. 

We drove one town over to Licola, where the train station is.  It looks abandoned.  Honestly.  There is nobody working behind the window, despite there being enough room for two, maybe three, tellers.  You buy your tickets at a place nearby.  (What kind of place, I’m unsure, as my aunt sent Matteo to go buy them).  Our ride in was about forty-five minutes.

Upon our arrival, Zia Antonella took is “in giro”.  She took us to a number or piazzas, sights and churches the names of which, much like the streets, have all meshed together in my mind.  Naples, although small, is not the easiest place to navigate.  The streets, with a couple of exceptions, are narrow, made of unevenly laid cobblestone God knows how long ago, but all incredibly beautiful, and each a little different than the last. 




After going around to the more important sights, we took a stroll down a street known as “Spacca Napoli”.  The street runs the length of nearly the entire city, and cuts it straight down the middle.  Eventually, you can turn off of Spacca Napoli onto Via San Gregorio Armeno, where you can find the stores of both my uncles Zio Mauro and Zio Daniele.  They both own very typical Neapolitan shops which sell ‘presepi’, which are handmade backgrounds or sceneries.  People then buy things to fill them with.  The pictures below are examples, though they are from a different, much older, shop of the same kind.




Then came pizza.  Before anyone has the chance to tell you otherwise, pizza is very much a Neapolitan thing.  It started here, was perfected here, and the best ingredients for it come from here.  In fact, the Pizza Margherita is so called because it was named for Queen Margherita of Savoy came for a visit in 1889.  Pizza, like much of the cuisine here, comes from necessity.  When there is little to be had, and only very basic ingredients to work with, how do you make something that tastes like more?  Think about what a pizza is at its core: bread, olive oil, tomatoes, mozzarella. So the success the product has had world wide- and the price to which it has risen in many places- is actually quite amusing.



After lunch, my cousin Luciano, who is two years older than I am, took Ellen, Liz and I around the historic center of the city, and around the part of the city where all of the universities are located.  This is my favorite part of the city.  It is so old, so historic, full of history, but at the same time the students help to make it full of life.  They mix old ideas with new ideas, old passions with new passions, to create a contrast between past and present. 






We then took a journey through Napoli Sotteranea, or Naples Underground.  Naples, having been Greek and Roman before being French and Spanish, is a city built on top of itself.  Underneath modern day Naples still exists an expansive system of aqueducts, cisterns and waterways from ancient times.  And we walked through it- at one point by candle light through a very narrow passageway (originally intended for water, not humans).  Once again, Naples’ past became undeniably relevant to its present. 




We opted to give ourselves a linguistic challenge, and chose to follow an Italian tour, not an English one.  Although we were asked by two different people beforehand whether we were absolutely positive we wanted to do that, and after even Luciano said it was difficult to follow even for some Italians, we stayed true to our choice.  Although we didn’t catch every single word, between the three of us, and the helpful visuals, we understood a good amount.  Luckily, despite the initial wariness of others, the young man who actually guided the tour seemed pleased to see students of Italian making a valiant effort. 

After our tour, it was time to go home, where we rested our weary tourist legs after a long day of walking.  I don’t think any of us felt too much like tourists, though.  At least not the bad, annoying kind.  That probably has a lot to do with the fact that we were there with a family of locals, and made a consistent effort to speak as much Italian as possible. 

That night for dinner, my aunt made the most delicious pasta con i frutti di mare (seafood).  As per usual, after eating we lingered at the table, talking and laughing, drinking wine, and just taking as much time as we needed to enjoy everything that had happened and was happening.  It is a very Italian thing to do, a very Italian state of mind, and something that I am growing to like very much.     

3 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Emilia,
    you are a great writer. And I do not say that because I'm your father. You brought back many mamories and tears to my eyes.
    I love you and I'm very proud of you.

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  3. Emilia this is awesome!! I am so excited to read more of your adventures soon! Thank you for the small historical background on Napoli, because that is damn cool and I love how its history affects its people today. That's something you don't find often in the US.

    Those streets look incredible! I like your description of them a lot. Also, you should keep an eye out for long, straight, streets wherever you are like Spacca Napoli. Cities back in tha day (like hundred of years ago) formed kind of haphazardly so long straight streets in old areas are usually signs of intervention on the current governments behalf. Usually theres a lot of interesting history behind them.
    The ancient city tour look uber cool, but also kind of scary!
    On a final note, I am so jealous of all the food you put up. My mouth was watering looking at it omgggg...
    I miss you!
    p.s. you're a fantastic writer.

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