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Legends
of Maltese origin |
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A characteristic feature common to some Maltese and
Gozitan legends is the popular attempt to attribute
the present site of a church to supernatural
intervention prevailing over human decisions. The
following stories illustrate this common motif,
which occurs in foreign legends as well.
Il-Palazz ta' Stagno:
Tradition claims that originally the village church
at Qormi was to be erected on the present site of St
Francis' Church, but the knight Stagno, who was
reputed to be a wizard, wanted it built nearer his
house, to this day called Il-Palazz ta' Stagno. So
every night he exercised his occult power until he
carried the foundation stones to the present site of
the parish church. The people finally came to the
conclusion that their patron saint was in favour of
the latter site, and accordingly the church rose on
the site where it now stands.
Gozo Cathedral:
Gozitans say that the foundations of the present
Cathedral church were being laid on Gelmus Hill,
about a quarter of a mile from Victoria, but the
stones were transported by supernatural agency to
the present site of the Cathedral within the
citadel. The Gozitans interpreted this as a sign
that Our Lady did not want the temple on Gelmus
Hill, but on the Citadel Hill.
The Nadur Church:
According to another Gozitan legend, the villagers
of Nadur could not agree on a site for their
church. An old villager, Grejger by name, suggested
that if they loaded an ass with quarry stones they
could erect their church at the place where the
beast first stopped. The others approved of this
plan and the ass was accordingly laden at Xewkija,
from where it went uphill towards Nadur not stopping
until it reached the highest spot of the rising
ground. There the villagers built their present
temple.
Our Lady of Loreto church:
Crossing over to Malta, we find that people still
recall how the Turks, having landed at Marsaxlokk,
proceeded from Żejtun towards St George's Bay,
Birżebbuġa, as far as Tal-Brolli. The Maltese were
under the command of the knight Murines (Umberto de
Murines), who vowed that he would erect a church in
honour of Our Lady of Loreto if the Turks were
defeated.
In the ensuing struggle the Maltese came out
victorious and the church was erected to fulfil the
vow. But the stones were miraculously transported
some 200 yards to the rise overlooking St George's
Bay, on top of which the church now stands. An old
painting (1548) in the small church shows a knight
kneeling in prayer while the Turkish armada is
approaching the island.
St Paul's Day:
In a variation of this intervention theme the
19th-century historian Count Ciantar mentioned an
old custom which was subsequently abolished. On St
Paul's Day (February 10) it was customary for the
farmers in the vicinity of San Pawl Milqi to prepare
a banquet. Each one gave some grain or its
equivalent in money, and a bull was fattened for the
feast. But these banquets gradually came to be a
source of great disorder. The Bishop prohibited them
and, together with the Apostolic Visitor, ordered
that the money usually spent should, in future, go
towards the saying of Masses to be celebrated on
feast days for the benefit of the inhabitants of
that neighbourhood.
And so it happened that on the day of that saint a
strong bull, tightly bound though it was, broke
loose of the ropes that bound it and set out at a
run until, arriving before the door of the church,
it paused for a while, then continued its headlong
run to the shore and plunged into the sea.
On account of this those peasants believed that it
was a clear indication that the Apostle was
displeased because the feast was no longer being
celebrated in the original manner. And they went
before the Bishop, pleading their case and asking
permission to continue the custom of preparing the
usual banquet; but the prudent prelate, following
the orders of the Holy See, instructed them to abide
by the decree and thus that custom came to an end.
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MORE FOLKLORE AND LEGENDS |
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Now let's mention
a few aspects of medicinal lore and practice in
Malta and Gozo. Needless to say, while some of the
herbs and actions have a recognised curative virtue
and still flourish among peasants, most of the
popular remedies mentioned are nowadays being
discarded and relegated to the limbo of forgotten
things, as they are bound to be with the spread of
education among the masses.
COMMON ONION (basal): When some
spikes of the sea-urchin get the skin, an onion is
cut up, roasted over a fire and then applied hot to
the skin to draw out the spikes. Sliced onions are
also rubbed over the parts of the skin affected by a
wasp's sting.
SQUIRTING CUCUMBER (faqqus il-hmir):
A concoction of this cucumber is especially
prescribed for persons suffering from jaundice.
Another remedy is to make patients smell the
squirting cucumber, and people believe this is
enough to drive off jaundice.
RUE (fejġel): If a mare stamps
on your foot, you have only to apply the triturated
leaves of this plant to the swollen foot and this
will prevent the collection of extraverted blood
under the skin. Others apply some rue leaves fried
in oil as an embrocation to crushed parts of the
body. And to heal an eye disease called ġidri tal-għajnejn
peasants often chew some rue leaves and then breathe
the smell into the affected eyes.
BORAGE (fidloqqom): A decoction
of this plant is taken by persons suffering from
frequent fits of coughing. The same holds good for
the plant known as marrubja (white
horehound).
A popular remedy against measles (hożba)
consists in putting a piece of red cloth on or near
the patient, or in covering him with red blankets.
This practice was prevalent among mothers attending
the child health clinics during the measles epidemic
of 1946. The custom of hanging red clothing in case
of illness characterised by the appearance of a rash
is by no means new, nor is it confined to the
Mediterranean countries. It is recorded that John of
Gaddesden, court doctor under Edward II of England,
got rid of smallpox by wrapping the sick person in
red clothes, and that he thus cured the heir to the
throne himself.
Also from the child health clinics come two other
popular beliefs.
According to one, the mother of a newborn babe has
to eat a hen's neck and head on the day following
childbirth, and if she fails to do so the child will
take more than three months to start keeping its
head erect. The famous Sicilian folklorist Giuseppe
Pitre' gives an interesting parallel in Sicily, but
with the difference that it is the father, not the
mother, who has to eat the hen's neck in or the
baby's neck may move freely.
The other belief requires the placenta to be
macerated with rain, or buried in the soil and then
watered to prevent the baby suffering from skin
eruption.
LEMON (Lumi): Sliced lemons are
rubbed over warts and ringworms to stop their
growth.
A common remedy to stop nose bleeding is to place an
iron key on the sufferer's neck. Carrying a dried
fig in one's pocket is a good preventive against
piles, while those suffering from rheumatism carry a
dried fish in their pockets as a charm.
DYSENTERY: The white or albumen of the egg
will cure children, suffering from dysentery, and
when applied to the broken legs of goats will help
to reset them.
XGĦIRA: To cure a sty (xgħira)
children throw seven grains of barley into a well.
According to what I heard from the Market fish
vendors, sailors carry a dried fish called serduq
il-bahar (sea cock) next to the skin as a
protection against malaria.
WHITLOW: To cure whitlow (dieħes) one
has to boil some crumbs and ask a breast-feeding
mother for the favour of some drops of her milk on
them. This mixture is then put over the swollen
finger. Mothers, however, will not volunteer to give
this service unless the patient assures them that he
will keep away from the fire when applying the
medicament because, if the patient stood too near
the fire, it would dry not only the crumbs but also
the milk in the mothers' breasts.
WEANING: To wean their young, Maltese mothers
smear their breasts with an extract from the aloe
tree (sabbara), which tastes very bitter. Mothers
sometimes preserve the umbilical cord of a newborn
child in powder. if the baby then develops a cold,
the umbilical cord is given to the child to smell.
This, it is believed, drives away the cold. |
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