Bar Vitali, modestly promoted (the sign says only "BAR") |
Monteverde Vecchio in 1935. The photo hangs in a back room of Mario's place. |
But it didn't happen that way. If you look at a map, or stroll the area, you'll see that there is no street running straight uphill from the train station. Instead, there's a church (on the map, the blue rectangle at lower right, with a cross).
The church was built in 1942 (Mario knows the date, all too well), in the last years of Fascism, and it's situated right where the anticipated road would have been. It's an undistinguished, late-Fascist-era building, just the sort of place that Bill enjoys and to which Dianne must be dragged. I don't think you'll ever get Mario Vitali inside. And now you know why.
Bill
PS from Dianne - Mario is something of a local historian and has written (in Italian only and now out of print) an intriguing family history. His grandmother, widowed young with 4 very young children, simply started cooking for local construction workers, then selling anything she could buy and break up into smaller lots. Her home turned into a luncheonette, then a store, then the bar and tobacco shop owned by Mario's father. Mario's grandmother, who had built her business from scratch, was the one most upset by the church's closing off of via Lorenzo Valla, Mario told me when I asked. But she did attend the church and her burial procession, down via Lorenzo Valla, ended there - a touch of irony in the whole story.
Title: Not Quite a Christmas Story: A Bar and a Church
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author 1:11 AM
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author 1:11 AM