Guide to a Diverse Community

Italians in Los Angeles: Guide to a Diverse Community (Luisa Del Giudice)

Demographics: Los Angeles: Fourth Italian City in the U.S. According to the most recent OSIA profile of Italians in America, based on the Year 2000 Census, Italian Americans are the nation’s fourth largest European ancestry group (after Germans, Irish, English), counting 15,700,000 or 6% of the entire U.S. population. Self-identification as “Italian American” increased by 7% since the 1990 census, Italian is the fourth foreign language most spoken in U.S. homes, and 66% are white-collar workers. Here are some statistics regarding California and Los Angeles Italians: California is the third state in the U.S. with most Italian Americans (1,450,000), after New York and New Jersey. Los Angeles is the 5th metropolitan area in the U.S. with most Italian Americans (after New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago): 568,000 (of a total metro population of 16,373,000). Among U.S. cities, Los Angeles ranks 4th in numbers of Italian Americans (95,300 out of a total population of 3,695,000). When Italians and California are mentioned in the same sentence, Northern California normally springs to mind, yet San Francisco has a total of only 39,200 Italians, out of a total population of 776,800—albeit in a more condensed geographic area.

(From: “A Profile of Today’s Italian Americans,” A Report Based on the Year 2000 Census, compiled by the Order Sons of Italy in America, OSIA, http://www.osia.org, see CLUBS & ORGANIZATIONS)


An Invisible Community? These statistics may be somewhat surprising. Yet the fact that currently there is no, publicly-identified “Little Italy” in Los Angeles, although the area around St. Peter’s Italian Church in what is now Chinatown, was once known as “Little Italy,” and that the majority of Italians seem to have been assimilated into the American mainstream and have ceased to “cluster,” account for the perception that Italians in Los Angeles are often invisible—even to themselves. (This online project, in fact, was created, in part, to help make the Italian community more visible to Angelenos—whether of Italian heritage or not.)

While in the 1980’s Los Angeles’ élites came to savor Italy’s culinary arts, its design innovations, and its fine arts, not surprisingly a majority of Italians (of remote peasant origin) remained silent—feeling slightly ambiguous about their personal heritage, or what may be referred to as their own regional Italian folk cultures. While 3rd-generation Italian Americans become increasingly interested in contemporary Italian culture and in Italian “high” culture, often visiting Italy for the first time or enrolling in Italian language courses, their parents and grandparents were sometimes “left in a time warp.” The fading of Italian identity during mid-century (until the ethnic revival of the 70’s) was more widespread in the U.S. than in other countries where Italians immigrated later (e.g., Canada). In Los Angeles this process of assimilation may have been even more rapid than in the East. The more tolerant and spacious California human environment did not make ethnic solidarity and geographic cohesion such strong psychological imperatives. Further, Italians of the earliest immigration, predominantly northern, were few and proved more readily assimilable than the subsequent numbers of immigrants from Southern Italy. Many descendents of these pioneers may vaguely remember that a grandparent was Italian or that their parents spoke Italian (amongst themselves only) or that they ate foods dimly recognized as Italian derived (e.g., polenta), do not feel particularly “Italian” today, although, as the 2000 Census reports, more Americans are generally identifying themselves as Italians. This new-found caché in all things Italian (but especially food, design, and travel), has made Italians and Italian culture clearly more visible in Los Angeles.


Italian Immigration to Los Angeles. Greater Los Angeles contains various historical strata of Italians: l) limited 19th-C. immigration from the Northern regions of Italy (Piedmont, Liguria, Lombardy and Ticino, western Tuscany); 2) larger numbers of Southern Italian (Puglia, Sicily, Calabria) in the early part of the 20th-C (although immigration quotas limited these numbers); 3) post-WWII immigration of Italians from all the above (but especially the South), from the Atlantic States (notably N.Y., Mass, Pennsylvania), a sprinkling from other Western States (i.e., Colorado), and even from South America—”trans-migrants” who have undergone a longer acculturation process than most, and; 4) recent individual middle-class or “white collar” “immigrants” (n.b. who might eschew this very term), primarily in business and in the professions. This growing presence of transient or “sojourning” Italians, numerically insignificant yet culturally and economically influential, might be considered part of Italy’s “brain drain” and entrepreneurial élan. They often represent outposts of Italian government and commerce (gravitating toward the Italian Consulate, the Trade Commission), academia & industry (the sciences and technology), entertainment, the arts, and food-related businesses (see: FOOD, Introduction). This trans-oceanic set represents contemporary Italian culture and tends to remain distinct and separate from the larger, established local Italian American community, and may be found primarily on the Westside.


Italians and Italian Americans. Amid this diversity of Italians, a self-selection process naturally occurs. Indeed a genuine gulf exists between Italian Americans and contemporary Italians—little interested in “folk” or “ethnic” manifestations of tradition. Since the vast majority of the historic Italian American community has rural and small town roots, however, traditional forms of folklife are the patrimony, whether acknowledged, remembered, or not, of this group. The historic community of Italians (now of second or third generation) who do form into associations, tend to make the preservation of cultural heritage and the celebration of town and regional festivities, a priority (See: CLUBS & ASSOCIATIONS). Post-economic boom Italians (1960s-) instead have a markedly different experience of Italian history and culture and have more often arrived as middle class professionals. Increasing economic parity and various other factors (e.g., shared work and educational milieux, recent experiences of Italian travel among older immigrants) have however helped blur such boundaries in recent years. Further, various aspects of Italian folk culture (festivals, foods, customs—but those associated with Italy rather than with Italians in America) have acquired renewed interest for descendents of the older as well as newer Italians. For instance, Italian traditional music collected in the field from oral tradition (See: PERFORMING ARTS, Traditional Music)—although little known—is showing greater appeal for young descendants of immigrants rediscovering their cultural roots, than is the “folk music” typical of Italian American (e.g., staged red, white and green, tambourine-shaking, “generic” tarantella dancers) festivals and other heritage events.


Suburban diffusion. Early Italians (See: ITALIANS AT EL PUEBLO), those primarily in agriculture (truck farming and vineyards), were also to be found in rural areas such as the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys, out through Upland, Cucamonga into San Bernardino County (cf. Guasti Winery, see: FURTHER READING, D’Amico). The early urban cluster spread from the Plaza at El Pueblo, to Lincoln Heights, and in the post WWII era fanned further eastward to suburban communities such as Alhambra, Monterey Park, Glendale, San Marino, and northward to Los Feliz-Vermont and even Encino, not to mention Santa Barbara or San Diego. Today, according to the informal census provided by the Italian newspaper’s circulation (See: MEDIA, Publications, L’Italo-Americano), ethnically loyal Italians can be found in Highland Park, S. Pasadena, Alhambra, Arcadia, Covina, Encino, Northridge, Woodland Hills, Burbank, Glendale. Further, many Italians participate in the Italian Catholic Federation (See: CLUBS & ASSOCIATION, Religious) which is affiliated with approximately 60 parishes (30 in Los Angeles, l0-12 in San Gabriel, about the same in San Fernando, and miscellaneous others). Because the ICF somewhat limits non-Italian participation in its chapters, their presence in the diocese is some indication of the demographic diffusion of the Italian community in Los Angeles.


San Pedro (See: SAN PEDRO: Italian Fishing Community; See: CELEBRATION, Folk Festival). While the downtown cluster (St. Peter’s Italian Church, Casa Italiana, and Italian Hall) may loosely be construed as a “Little Italy” (although resident Italians are now rare in that area), San Pedro may today represent the only visible local nucleus of Italians and approximate a de facto “Little Italy,” although outward diffusion and the changing fishing industry are changing this community as well. This clustering on the Los Angeles landscape has arisen for a unique reason. Until recently, San Pedro was geographically discrete and occupationally compact due to its function as Los Angeles’ port. Its two predominant Italian groups held a significant role in the local fishing industry (even though they leave no trace in the Los Angeles Maritime Museum!). San Pedro Italians come from two Italian island fishing communities: Ischia and Sicily. Although they arrived in the migrations of the early 20th C (the Sicilians later), the autonomous nature of this group’s trade, and the relative geographic compactness of San Pedro, fostered the preservation of ethnic loyalty.

San Pedro Italians and Los Angeles Italians may see themselves as separate communities and, as commonly occurs, each side’s perception of the other is that Italian culture is best preserved “over there.” Los Angeles Italians may see San Pedro as a compact and conservative Italian community (an “urban village”), while the San Pedrans point instead to St. Peter’s Church and Casa Italiana as the center of more large-scale Italian activity and events. San Pedro has few formal Italian American associations. This may be due to geographic, cultural, and occupational homogeneity (even though the fishing industry is in decline, the Ischietani and Sicilians have a common origin in San Pedro), rendering further forms of association superfluous. While the two San Pedro Italian groups have not formed their respective town and regional clubs, the Ischietani nonetheless have gravitated toward the Italian Catholic Federation (through their parish churches, such as Mary Star of the Sea), while the Sicilians are represented in great numbers in the Italian American Club and in the Trappeto (prov. of Palermo, Sicily) Club. They celebrate these patron saint days: Saint John Joseph (for the Ischietani); St. Joseph and St. Rosalia for the Sicilians, and St. Peter (Italian American Club). In past decades the Fisherman’s feasts (now in decline) were a major expression of the Italian community’s traditional culture. (See: COLLECTIONS, Archives).


Fragmentation and Unity. The extreme diversification of Italians (e.g., the North-South split, marked regionalism, and a sense of attachment to one’s hometown) are too well-documented in Italy and among immigrants, to repeat here. On the one hand, this diversity presents a richness of culture; while on the other, it creates obstacles when concerted effort and unity of action are called for. The pull between diversity and homogeneity may create ambiguities of cultural allegiance. For instance, for many older immigrants (particularly those who lived through the xenophobic war years when national loyalties were tested), needed to make American allegiance explicit, and succeeded, perhaps more in uniting Italian Americans on the “American” rather than on the “Italian” side of the equation. Their Italian side however, continued to promote splintering—defying many a St. Peter’s priest called to the community to administer to the notoriously factional community (See: FURTHER READING, St. Peter’s Italian Church). A need for unifying Italians seems to have been broadly felt in the 1970’s and continues to reverberate on up to the present for a variety of reasons. A residual splintering effect (due to regional and social origins, along with present economic and geographic factors) has generally thwarted clarity of direction and impact and has likely contributed to the Italian community’s relative invisibility. Some club charters actually preclude banding with other similar clubs, in order to better preserve their individuality. Recent developments however indicate that this situation may be improving.


St. Peter’s Catholic Church and the Scalabrini Order (See: RELIGION). The Scalabrini Fathers (Missionaries of St. Charles), under the energetic Father Luigi (Donanzan), have proven a major unifying force in the Italian community. The Scalabrinians, whose mission is to serve the needs of migrants and refugees (founded by Giovanni Battista Scalabrini in 1887 to assist immigrants to the Americas), continue to minister to their social and cultural needs as well as the strictly material and pastoral (See: RELIGION). (Today, under Father Giovanni Bizzotti, the Church also serves as a soup kitchen to the area’s migrants and the homeless.) The order managed L’Italo-Americano

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Italian Catholics

St. Peter’s Italian Catholic Church on
Broadway, the only national parish
in the Southland
St. Peter’s Italian Catholic Church (& Casa Italiana)
1039 N. Broadway
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Tel: 323-225-8119
Fax: 323-225-0085
E-mail: stpeterit@yahoo.com
Fr. Raniero Alessandrini, CS

Scalabrini House of Discernment
St. Peter’s Italian Church 1039 N. Broadway
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Vocation Office Director 323-225-8027
See: COMMUNITY SITES, Community Sites & Meeting Place -The Scalabrini Order ((I Missionari di San Carlo Borromeo; The Missionaries of Saint Charles Borromeo) and www.scalabrini.org
See: SENIORS, Retirement Centers – Villa Scalabrini

Mary Star of the Sea, on bell/clock tower
of the San Pedro church
Mary Star of the Sea Church

870 8th St.
San Pedro, CA 90731
Tel: (310) 833-3541
Fax : (310)833-9254
E-mail: office@marystar.org

Rev. Fr. John Provenza
See: CELEBRATIONS, Folk Festival, St. Joseph’s Tables

Italian Catholic Federation See: CLUBS, ASSOCIATIONS & SOCIETIES Religious Associations, Patron Saint Societies and http://www.icf.org

Italian-speaking Roman Catholic priests (celebration of Mass in Italian):

Fr. Giovanni Bizzotto, C.S. (Villa Scalabrini, St. Charles Rectory)
Fr. Raniero Alessandrini, C.S. (St. Peterís Italian Church)
Fr. Esvin Marroquin Sanchez (St. Peterís Italian Church)
Fr. Ermete Nazzani, C.S. (Villa Scalabrini, Exec. Dir)
Fr. Antonio Cacciapuoti, (Church of Christ the King, Hollywood)
Fr. John Provenza (Mary Star of the Sea Church, San Pedro)
Fr. Richard Zanotti (Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Catholic Church, Sun Valley)
Fr. Augusto Moretti (Emeritus, Pasadena)

A representation of Mother
Cabrini in stained-glass,
inside Mary Star of the Sea
Church, San Pedro

A Bit of History: Saint, Mother Francis Xavier Cabrini (1850-1917), built orphanage in downtown Los Angeles. “Cabrini, the first U.S. citizen to be declared a saint by the Catholic Church, built the shrine in the early years of this century in honor of the Virgin Mary. Until Monday, the grotto was all that remained of an orphanage operated by Cabrini’s order, the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart, just north of downtown. On Monday morning, to make way for an apartment complex, workers began breaking up the structure and gathering the rocks in baskets to rebuild the shrine at a Sunland retirement homeóthis time to honor Cabrini. “She had nothing when she died,” said Gloria Lothrop, who holds the Whitsett Chair of California History at California State University Northridge, and spearheaded the effort to save the shrine.

Santa Lucia statue at the Santa Lucia

feast day dinner
“But she dedicated her life to helping Italian immigrants all over the Western Hemisphere. And she loved Los Angeles.” [Ö] The Regina Coeli (“Queen of Heaven” in Latin) Orphanage on what is now Cesar Chavez Avenue was founded in 1906. [Ö] Around the time of Cabrini’s death, the Los Angeles orphanage was moved to Burbank, where it later served as a clinic for teenage girls in danger of getting tuberculosis and as Villa Cabrini High School.” The shrine was moved to the Villa Scalabrini Retirement Center [See: SENIORS, Retirement Centers – Villa Scalabrini From: “Saint’s Legacy of Service Survives in L.A.; Religion: Shrine that Mother Cabrini helped create in early 1900s is saved and will get a new home in Sunland,…

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Writers & Translators

Leo Politi: Artist, author, and book illustrator. “Politi began publishing childrenís books on local themes in 1938. In 1949 The Mission Bell, an illustrated work about San Juan Mission, won the coveted Caldecott Medal for childrenís literature. Politi lived on Bunker Hill for over 30 years. In the 1950s and 1960s, when the Community Redevelopment Agency slated that neighborhood for total destruction and urban renewal, Politi painted the Victorian buildings as they might have appeared half a century earlier, publishing the illustrations in Bunker Hill, Los Angeles (1964). He also issued a collection of watercolors depicting the early parks of Los Angeles, and painted a mural on the Biscailuz Building in El Pueblo Park in the 1970s.” (From: Leonard Pitt and Dale Pitt, Los Angeles A to Z: An encyclopedia of the city and county, University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1997.) Politi was born in Fresno in 1908 and died in 1996. A year-long series of events to commemorate the 2008 Leo Politi Centennial

Works written and illustrated by Leo Politi:

AngeLeno Heights Los Angeles: Leo Politi, 1989.

A Boat for Peppe, New York: Scribner, 1950.

Bunker Hill, Los Angeles: reminiscences of bygone days, Palm Desert, Calif.: Desert-Southwest, 1964.

Paul Politi, son of Leo Politi, with the
Friends of Leo Politi, sharing artwork
and stories, 2005
The butterflies come, New York: Scribnerís, 1957

Emmet, New York: Scribnerís, 1971.

Juanita, New York: Scribner, 1948.

Lito and the clown, New York: Scribner, 1964.

Little Leo. New York: Scribner, 1951.

Little Pancho, New York: The Viking press, 1938.

Mieko, San Carlos, Calif.: Golden Gate Junior Books, 1969.

The Mission Bell, New York: Scribner, 1953.

Moy Moy, New York: Scribner, 1960.

Mr. Fongís Toy Shop, New York: Scribner, c1978

The Nicest Gift, New York: Scribner, [1973]

Pedro, the Angel of Olvera Street, New York: C. Scribnerís sons, 1946.

Piccoloís Prank, New York: Scribner, 1965.

The Poinsettia, Palm Desert, Calif.: Best-West Publications, 1967.

Redlands Impressions, Redlands, Calif. (300 E. State St., Redlands 92373): Moore Historical Foundation, c1983.

Rosa, New York: C. Scribnerís, c1963

Saint Francis and the Animals, New York: Scribner, 1959.

Song of the Swallows, New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 1948.

Tales of the Los Angeles Parks, Palm Desert, Calif.: Best-West Publications, 1966.

Three Stalks of Corn, New York: Scribner, 1976.

Young Giotto, Boston: Horn Book, 1947.

Of related interest:

Around the World, Around our Town: Recipes from San Pedro, edited by Dolores S. Lisica; illustrated by Leo Politi. San Pedro, Calif.: Friends of the San Pedro Library, 1986.

A Bit of History: John Fante. “Los Angeles, give me some of you! Los Angeles, come to me the way I came to you, my feet over your streets, you pretty town I loved you so much, you sad flower in the sand, you pretty town.” So intones Arturo Bandini, the hero of John Fante’s “Ask the Dust.” Holed up in his cheap room, subsisting on oranges and stubborn determination, he is the quintessential starving artist, his base not a romantic garret in Paris, or even a drafty loft in Manhattan, but a rooming house on Bunker Hill, Los Angeles. He has come, like his creator, from a poor Italian family in Colorado, left his religion and his family to become that great thing, a writer. Arturo’s success seems both imminent and highly unlikely. But succeed he does.
“Fante’s inauspicious beginnings are mirrored by those of his protagonist, Bandini. His father was an immigrant Italian stonemason; his mother Italian American and frustratingly pious. Born in Denver, he survived a childhood shaped by poverty and prejudice, as well as by the sorry clash between his mother’s meekness and his father’s drinking, brawling, gambling and macho posturing. Fante was educated in the local Catholic primary school and a Jesuit secondary school; he considered a career in the priesthood until he began to question Catholic teachings. Thereafter his relationship with his family religion grew more complex and antagonistic.

In 1929, Fante left Colorado for Los Angeles, striking out on his own soon after his father left the family for another woman. Though Fante later claimed that “[p]overty drove me out to California,” [Stephen] Cooper asserts that “[h]e was going to become a writer.” He settled in Wilmington and a job in the fish canneries. He began writing between shifts, and his experiences working in the canneries and the docks, the hard men, the racial divides, all found their way into his exquisite fiction. It was, however, his family, alternately cast as the Bandinis, the Toscanas, the Molises, that preoccupied the majority of Fante’s work.” Excerpt from: Book review by Phyllis Richardson of Dreams From Bunker Hill; Full of Life: A Biography of John Fante (by Stephen Cooper); North Point Press. Full review by Phyllis Richardson in: Los Angeles Times, Apr 16, 2000, p. 20. A conference on the writer: John Fante: The First Conference, was held from at California State University, Long Beach, May 4-6, 1995.

John Fanteís Works:

1933 Was a Bad Year, Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press, 1985

Ask the Dust, New York: Stackpole Sons, 1939.

The Big Hunger: Stories, 1932-1959, edited by Stephen Cooper, Santa Rosa, CA: Black Sparrow Press, 2000.

Bravo, Burro! by John Fante and Rudolph Borchert; illustrated by Marilyn Hirsh. New York: Hawthorn Books,[1970]

The Brotherhood of the Grape, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977.

Dago Red, illustrated by Valenti Angelo, New York: The Viking press, 1940.

Dreams from Bunker Hill, Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press,c1982

John Fante & H.L. Mencken: a personal correspondence, 1930-1952, edited by Michael Moreau; consulting editor, Joyce Fante, Santa Rosa: Black Sparrow Press, 1989.

Full of Life, Boston: Little, Brown, 1952.

The Road to Los Angeles, Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press, 1985.

Wait Until Spring, Bandini, New York: Stackpole Sons, 1938.

West of Rome: Two Novellas, Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press, 1986.

The Wine of Youth: Selected Stories, New York: Ecco, 2002.

Other Southern California writers: Lawrence Madalena, Jo Pagano.…

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Sicilian Folk life in Los Angeles

Many aspects of traditional life seem to have fared better among Sicilians than among other regional Italians. Sicilians still dance the tarantella, sing dialect songs informally, practice their folk religious rituals and regional cuisine. As one Sicilian, Virginia Buscemi Carlson, passionately affirms: “without our traditions, there would be nothing left: we would be just like everyone else.” It may be no coincidence therefore, that more than one cultural group exists for Sicilians in Los Angeles (Arba Sicula and Sicilia Culturale [See: CLUBS AND ASSOCIATIONS). The feast day of St. Joseph’s in Los Angeles features a notable Sicilian custom: St. Joseph’s Day Tables. This custom has not only been maintained through two and three generations largely intact, but actually shows some signs of crossing ethnic and religious boundaries. In 2005, for example, a Table was be offered at All Saints Episcopal Church (in conjunction with Slow Food and Sustainable World), in Pasadena, as part of a food justice program.

“The mid-Lenten Sicilian custom of the St. Joseph’s Table, often lasting as many as three days (St. Joseph’s feast day is March 19), is widely celebrated in Los Angeles, as in many other areas of diaspora Sicilian settlement.

St. Joseph’s “table” normally includes a devotional altar with a statue of the saint holding the infant Jesus, rising (or separate) from a table, blessed by a priest. The table is laden with elaborate food offerings of traditional braided breads, vegetables, fruits, and sweets. The ritual collection of these foods by begging (the questua) from family, friends, even strangers, is a necessary aspect of offering an altar.

The large braided breads (cudureddi) are typically in the form of cross, crown (for Jesus), staff (for Joseph), palm (for Mary), while the smaller breads may symbolize instruments of the Passion, or even fanciful shapes such as sun, moon, stars, flowers, birds, and so forth. Vegetables include fried or stuffed cauliflower, artichokes, zucchine, eggplant, cardoons, frittate (omelettes) of every sort: fava bean, asparagus, peas, peppers, while the season’s finest first fruits are arranged in baskets replicating cornucopias of plenty. Since this feast falls within the meatless Lenten season, fish is featured, as are traditional Sicilian sweets such as persiche (cream-filled pasteries made to look like peaches), cassadini (sweet ravioli), sfingi, cannoli, and fig cookies.

Many continue to be private devotional tables, promised to the saint to secure favor for a loved one who is sick or in some special need, or in response to a prayer which has been granted, to honor one’s namesake, or as a general “Sicilian Thanksgiving.” Increasingly, however, tables are becoming public or semi-public events, held in a church (often affiliated with the Italian Catholic Federation, ICF [see: RELIGION]), banquet hall, retirement home, or family business.

Widely diffused in Sicily, St. Joseph’s tables were primarily meant for directly feeding the poor as a form of public charity. Now, in Sicily, as in Los Angeles, they function more indirectly as a means of raising funds for charities. Three of the poorest of the village, including orphans, were dressed as Mary, Joseph, Jesus (I santi, the “Saints” as they are called) and reenacted the Holy Family seeking lodging (cf. Las Posadas for Mexicans). The Family ritually knocks on three doors, is turned away twice, and then finally finds shelter and food at the home of the family giving the table. The “Saints” are seated directly at the table, and served a substantial meal (a taste of every item, sometimes a ritual 3, of the blessed food). Thereafter, all are invited to the communal banquet where typically a “poor man’s meal” is served: either a bean soup, a cuscusu (couscous) if you are from Trapani, or pasta with sarde (pasta with sardines), in addition to bread and fruit. No one is turned away. In Sicily, an olive branch or palm frond over the door signaled to the village that a family had opened its doors to the community. After supper, guests are given blessed foods, a bread roll, perhaps an orange, and perhaps fava beans (sometimes referred to as “lucky beans”) to take home.

Although details vary among Sicilians themselves, the focus is always on the altar-table, and on feeding the community, whether that is a restricted circle of family and friends, the neighborhood, or village, and on how the funds are gathered. At public events, food may be sold or auctioned, a donation may be requested for the meal or for viewing the table. In Sicily, significant funds may be raised by auctioning St. Joseph’s beard! Proceeds and foods are then given to the poor.

You can participate in these festivities in several places around town: at Casa Italiana (affiliated with St. Peter’s Italian Church, 1039 North Broadway), at many churches affiliated with the Italian Catholic Federation, as well as at Mary Star of the Sea church in San Pedro (870 8th St.), where one of the most fully-articulated celebrations occurs, including a special mass, a procession with saint, followed by children in costume, a marching band, guilds, societies, and confraternities, and ending in a large banquet. It was at this church that the first public table ever given in the Los Angeles area was held in 1958, according to Charles Speroni, one of the first to study St. Joseph Tables in Southern California. The church’s own St. Joseph Guild, comprised of approximately 35 (largely Sicilian) women, whose yearly task it is to organize the public charity event and feed hundreds from the church kitchen, celebrated its 25th anniversary in 1998.

St. Joseph’s Tables have become one of the major manifestations of Italian ethnicity in Los Angeles. As the poor and the homeless grow in Los Angeles, this ethnically-specific custom has gained renewed relevancy. It is perhaps for this reason, in part, that St. Joseph is finding his place in the city of Angels, and into the hearts of non-Sicilians as well, making this ritual of food redistribution a “feast for our times.” With its simplicity of intent, a tradition with roots in a far-off land and remote past addresses issues which are both contemporary and urgent, and demonstrates once again how traditional cultures may enrich modern urban life and help tackle some of its problemsñwith humanity, grace, and sometimes divine inspiration.”

[Excerpt from: Luisa Del Giudice, “Joseph Among the Angels: St Joseph’s Tables and Feeding the Poor in Los Angeles,” exhibition program, exhibition co-curated by Luisa Del Giudice and Virginia Buscemi Carlson, UCLA at the Armand Hammer Museum and Cultural Center, March 18-19, 1998.All Rights Reserved]…

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Institutions

Italians and Italian Americans. Amid this diversity of Italians, a self-selection process naturally occurs. Indeed a genuine gulf exists between Italian Americans and contemporary Italians—little interested in “folk” or “ethnic” manifestations of tradition. Since the vast majority of the historic Italian American community has rural and small town roots, however, traditional forms of folklife are the patrimony, whether acknowledged, remembered, or not, of this group. The historic community of Italians (now of second or third generation) who do form into associations, tend to make the preservation of cultural heritage and the celebration of town and regional festivities, a priority (See: CLUBS & ASSOCIATIONS). Post-economic boom Italians (1960s-) instead have a markedly different experience of Italian history and culture and have more often arrived as middle class professionals. Increasing economic parity and various other factors (e.g., shared work and educational milieux, recent experiences of Italian travel among older immigrants) have however helped blur such boundaries in recent years. Further, various aspects of Italian folk culture (festivals, foods, customs—but those associated with Italy rather than with Italians in America) have acquired renewed interest for descendents of the older as well as newer Italians. For instance, Italian traditional music collected in the field from oral tradition (See: PERFORMING ARTS, Traditional Music)—although little known—is showing greater appeal for young descendants of immigrants rediscovering their cultural roots, than is the “folk music” typical of Italian American (e.g., staged red, white and green, tambourine-shaking, “generic” tarantella dancers) festivals and other heritage events. …

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Folk life Specialists

Roberto Catalano, Ph.D.
Tel: (909) 864-0132
E-mail: favax@earthlink.net

Luisa Del Giudice, Ph.D.

P.O. Box 241553
Los Angeles, CA 90024-1553
Tel: (310) 474-1698
Fax: (310) 474-3188
E-mail: luisadg@humnet.ucla.edu
(Italian oral traditions, oral history, folklife: foodways, celebration, belief, St. Josephís Tables)

Alessandro Falassi, Ph.D.

Universit‡ per Stranieri di Siena
Piazza Carlo Rosselli, 27-28
53100 Siena
Tel. 011-39-0577-240111
Fax: 011-39- 0577-281030
E-mail: info@unistrasi.it
(foodways, Hollywoodís Italian kitchens, festivals, Palio of Siena)

Enzo Fina
Tel/Fax: (626) 284-0031
E-mail: oznemrac@aol.com
(Salentine music traditions. Southern Italian musician)

Sabina Magliocco, Ph.D.

Department of Anthropology
California State University, Northridge
18111 Nordhoff St.
Northridge, CA 91330
Tel: (818) 677-3331
sabina.magliocco@csun.edu
(Sardinian & Mediterranean folklife, Neo-Paganism)

Ken Scambray, Ph.D., See: WRITERS
scambrayk@verizon.net
(Watts Towers, Baldassare Forestiereís Underground Gardens, Fresno, Italian California/American writers)

Carlo Siliotto

Tel: (424) 228-4695
E-mail: carlo@carlosiliotto.com
(Traditional music of Lazio, composition of music for film.)

Edward F. Tuttle. Ph.D.
Italian Department
212 Royce Hall, UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095
tuttle@ucla.edu
(Romance historical linguistics & Italian dialectology, local Italian history, California wine history)

Americans in the West Project

c/o Library of Congress
American Folklife Center
101 Independence Avenue, SE
Washington, D.C. 20540-4610
Tel: (202) 707-5510
Fax: (202) 707-2076
Email: folklife@loc.gov…

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Celebrations

In 1930 Pagliano bought the hotel, by now in a state of disrepair, and he, in turn, sold it to the state of California when the decision was made in 1953 to create El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historic Monument.

With seven of the thirteen buildings on Olvera Street either built or used for long periods by Italians and the Pico House rented or owned by them for more than half a century, it seems appropriate for the Italians of today to organize together to reclaim their heritage and to create a museum in the Italian Hall, since that building was specially constructed for Italian occupancy. Now the Historic Italian Hall Foundation is hard at work planning a museum.…

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Italian Journalists in Los Angeles

(C/o the Italian Consul or c/o the Istituto Italiano di Cultura for contact informations

Silvia Bizio: Amica (women’s magazine), Repubblica (newspaper)

Carlo Bizio: L’Espresso (weekly news magazine), La Repubblica, Glamour Virtual
www.espressonline.it

Elisa Lionelli: Marie Claire, Gioia (women’s magazines)

Marco Giovannini: Panorama (weekly news magazine)

Alessandra Venezia: Panorama (weekly news magazine) www.panorama.it, L’Unità

Daniela Roveda, Il sole 24 ore (financial bi-monthly newspaper), ANSA

Lorenzo Soria, La Stampa (newspaper)

Rosanna Albertini, Flash Art, Art Press (art publications)

Luca Celada: RAI (National radio and television network)

Stefano Vaccara: America Oggi

A Bit of History: Pier Maria Pasinetti, novelist, news correspondent (b. June 24, 1913), Cosmopolitan Venetian, award-winning writer, corresponding journalist for Il Corriere della Sera (from 1964 to the 1990s), with the column entitled “Dall’estrema America” (‘From farthest America’). Pasinetti was professor of Italian and comparative literature at UCLA from 1949 to the mid-1990s, and a trans-Atlantic commuter from 1949-2003, spending parts of each year in his beloved Venice (Italy) and Los Angeles. Among his novels are: Rosso veneziano (1957), La confusione (1964), Il ponte dell’Accademia (1968), Domani improvvisamente (1971), Il centro (1979), Dorsoduro (1983), Melodramma (1993), Piccole veneziane complicate (1996).…

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