
 
        
         
		COURIER LIFE, JULY 16-22, 2021 3  
 due to the COVID-19 pandemic  
 was the event’s second cancellation  
 in 118 years. 
 For lifter Dan Mace, Sunday’s  
 procession  felt  like  a  
 homecoming. 
 “You  always  remember  
 how much you miss something  
 when you don’t get to do  
 it for a year,” said Mace, who  
 has lifted the Giglio each year  
 since he was 12. In 2010, he became  
 an  apprentice  capo,  or  
 captain, of the lift. 
 For others, the dancing  
 of the Giglio served as a reunion. 
 “It’s great to be back,” said  
 94-year-old Joe Martino, who  
 celebrated not only the lifting  
 of the Giglio Sunday, but also  
 seeing his friend Joey Langone, 
  70, for the fi rst  time  in  
 person since before the pandemic. 
 “Where’s the oxygen?” Langone  
 joked between lifts. 
 The two tuned in to last  
 year’s livestream, but said  
 nothing  compares  to  being  
 there in person. 
 “This  is  something  spiritual, 
  I wouldn’t miss it for the  
 world,” Martino said. “The  
 only  time  I  missed  it  before  
 the pandemic was during the  
 war.”  
 And still, for some, it was  
 their fi rst time. 
 “This  is  like  a  carnival,  
 such  great  energy,”  said  Alexandra  
 Finch, who attended  
 with  Clarissa  Passarinho.  
 Finch  donned  an  Italian  fl ag  
 in her hat. 
 This  year’s  feast  includes  
 a  nine-night  Solemn  Novena,  
 celebrated  by  Monsignor  David  
 Cassato of Bensonhurst’s  
 St. Athanasius Roman Catholic  
 Church, with prayers dedicated  
 to a special intention  
 each  night.  Sunday’s  Novena  
 will be dedicated to those who  
 have died from COVID-19. 
 Among those honorees  
 are Joseph Furante, a lifter  
 of over 50 years who died of  
 COVID-19  on  Feb.  5,  2020. He  
 was 81 years old. 
 Furante’s son, John, helped  
 lift the Giglio in his honor. 
 “He said something bad  
 would happen, he knew,” John  
 said of his father’s illness. “It  
 was the worst thing in the  
 world.” 
 Also among the crowd Sunday  
 was Republican mayoral  
 candidate Curtis Silwa, who  
 received resounding applause  
 from the crowd. 
 The  Williamsburg  festival  
 was founded by Italian immigrants  
 from  the  town  of Nola  
 in 1903, who imported many  
 traditions from the old country  
 into modern festivities to  
 honor their patron saint, San  
 Paolino  (Saint  Paulinus  in  
 Latin), and the event that led  
 to his canonization. 
 According to legend, the  
 town of Nola was invaded by  
 pirates from North Africa in  
 410 AD, who abducted and  
 enslaved local young men.  
 Paolino is said to have offered  
 himself as a slave in exchange  
 for one woman’s son, and he  
 was taken back to North Africa, 
  but only until a Turkish  
 Sultan heard of his heroic acts  
 and ordered him freed. Upon  
 his return to Nola, Paolino  
 was greeted by townsfolk carrying  
 lilies. 
 The tower is carried  
 through Brooklyn, and in  
 Nola, to symbolize Paolino’s  
 return. Furthermore, the boat  
 paraded through the streets  
 on Sunday is meant to represent  
 the  ship  that  returned  
 him from captivity.  
 The next big lift will be the  
 Night Dancing of the Giglio,  
 scheduled for Wednesday, July  
 17 at 7:30 p.m. 
 Additional reporting by  
 Caroline Ourso 
 Participants lift the seven-story Giglio during the Annual Italian Parish Feast in Williamsburg on Sunday, July  
 11.  Photos by Caroline Ourso