126th Giglio feast to take place in Williamsburg
One of the most spectacular, unusual traditional Italian-American feasts in the United States is taking place from July 10 to 21 in Williamsburg.
The Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and St. Paulinus of Nola features the lifting of an 80-foot-tall, three-ton statue known as the Giglio, which means “lily” in Italian. The statue is topped by a representation of St. Paulinus, an early Christian martyr who was taken prisoner by the Turks; when he was finally released, St. Paulinus returned to Nola in a boat and the people all ran to shore to greet him with lilies.
The feast, which originated with immigrants from the region of Nola, is now one of the most popular Italian-American street festivals in the New York area, is now second in size only to the San Gennaro Festival in Little Italy. It will have live entertainment nightly, vendors selling Italian specialties and international delicacies, parades, a bazaar with games, children’s rides – and for the first time, a “best meatball” contest.