Madonna del Ladro Buono explained

Building Name:Madonna del Ladro Buono
Native Name:Chiesetta della Madonna del Ladro Buono
Native Name Lang:it
Map Size:220px
Location:Alcamo, province of Trapani, Italy
Coordinates:37.969°N 12.9627°W
Religious Affiliation:Catholic
Rite:Catholic
Region:Sicily
State:Italy
Province:province of Trapani
Territory:Alcamo
Municipality:Alcamo
Patron:Madonna della Pietà
Year Completed:1989

Madonna del Ladro Buono ("Madonna of the Good Thief", in Sicilian Madonna di lu Tribonu or Madonna di lu Latru Bonu) is a Catholic church in Alcamo, in the province of Trapani.

Description

The little church, with an image of Mary's Pietà with Jesus taken down from the Cross, is located above the town waterworks at the same level as the second turn in the road leading to the top of Mount Bonifato.

According to tradition, there was a thief living as a penitent in that place who nurtured veneration for the image. In a letter sent to Don Tommaso Papa in 1931, Francesco Maria Mirabella wrote that the legend of the Good Thief was an invention of Liborio Dia, a poet from Alcamo, and that "Tribonu" is an alteration of "Tribona" in the dialect of Alcamo. "Tribona" is a niche surmounting an altar or an aedicula.[1]

Professor Carlo Cataldo discovered that the word "Tribona" has been in use since at least the 17th century, as a deed dated 1674 mentions an enclosure on the mountain which was called "la Tribona", where there were trees such as sumac and other plants. It is mentioned in other documents dated 1723, 1810, and 1928.

Tradition

In the early 1930s, locals went on pilgrimage to the church every Friday in March during Lent. The dialectal poet Giuseppe Fulco noted the pilgrimages had become merely an excuse for a trip to the countryside, as he complained in one of his poems:

E ci vannu a bella postaDonni schetti e maritati,Pri ballari senza sostaE piscari quattru ucchiati.(That is: they go there intentionally, girls and ladies, to dance without a break, and get some looks).

In 1989 the church was restored by the owners, the Mancuso family, including placing the name "Madonna del Ladro Buono" on the façade. They replaced the old print representing Our Lady of Sorrows and Jesus Christ taken down the cross with a painting by Stefano Papa, an artist from Alcamo.

On the right side of the altar is an ancient cistern, the water from which believers drank the water to purify their souls and bodies.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Carlo Cataldo, Accanto alle aquile: Il castello alcamese di Bonifato e la chiesa di S. Maria dell’Alto p.102-105, Palermo, Brotto, 1991.