story by chris egoville  

It is Sunday in Cagli, a town boasting thirteen churches. Bells are ringing and mass is being held. Liturgies can be overheard beyond the marble steps outlining the sacred ground, as old couples dressed in their best shuffle down otherwise empty vias to make it to their favorite church on time. However, these churches are drawing smaller and smaller crowds of devoted Cagliese, and the youth is at the core of those absent. The massive and intricately decorated churches that once drew the majority of the town now have mass for a dwindling minority of older, Catholic Cagliese.

In America there is a popular perception of Italy as a traditionally, and still prominently, Catholic country of devoted church-going worshippers. This pretty picture, painted by the media, has permeated many Americans' vision of Italian culture and tradition. Movies such as the Godfather, as well as Italian-American families, have contributed to this fallacious picture. Tightness of the family unit may not be a romanticized view of Italian families, but the workings of Italian-American families do not translate so simply or ideally. Simply put, Italian-Americans and antiquated portrayals of Italy's past are not an accurate representation of Italians currently living in Italy; these are separate factions from a common background. As times change, so do people's values.

In Cagli, the number of practicing Catholics is down and plunging even further, with rejuvenation out of

 
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sight. According to Fr. Bartolucci, a Catholic priest in Cagli, only 25% of Catholics in Cagli actually attend mass. Even more alarming is that of this minority, most are older men and women. This is not a geographical peculiarity solely pertaining to Cagli, either. Gabriella, a well-traveled student in Perugia and resident/translator in Cagli, explained that Cagli's current plight is not unique. All over Italy churchgoers are becoming a small clique as citizens opt to sleep in and skip out on services.

Is this current situation novel? Not in the least. In speaking with Franco, a Cagliese man who has seen the better part of three-quarters of a century, I discovered that the trend for at least the past twenty years has been that younger Catholics have been nowhere to be seen when Sunday morning comes. Though he concedes that this saddens him, he is not surprised because of what he sees as a transition of values. "This is a different generation because the younger people aren't forced by their parents to go [to church] anymore. Because of the culture now they don't go with their family." That culture is one in which ties to a structured church are weakening. Many Italians, including the aforementioned Gabriella, are Protestant. Rather than choosing to pass on Sunday services as a sign of moral laxity, Italians are turning to other avenues for spirituality.

Franco (and his concurring friends) went on to elaborate that while he makes a weekly trek to mass to pray and talk to God every Sunday, he can sympathize with the younger crowd's current decision. "They stay out late Saturdays and want to sleep in on Sundays. Also, politics... the mayor is left wing, which is the party most young people identify themselves with." The implication here is that the extreme left is communism, an ideology which God's role is absent from daily life. As Gabriella put it, "Young people think the left wing is cooler because that's where the music and things that appeal to that generation are. So, they like Che Guevara and rebel music." Popular music here (such as Rage Against the Machine) and popular dance styles at clubs and parties all over Italy fall under this Marxist dogma as expressions of opposition to the traditional values. No longer is the family the core of many Italian's lives. Among the most affected are the regazzi (youth), because they are not coaxed to go to church they choose not to attend. The image of the Italian family dressed up and making their way to church is a faded photo of the past, closer resembling a 1950's American sitcom rather than current Italy. This shift is evident regardless of whether inhabitants live in Italy.















This schism between generations is no secret in America. Families are often divided over competing values and their corresponding priority. The American view of generational relationships in Italy is that of a tightly knit family in which domestic roles are embraced.


The children do as they're told, obeying their wise parents and dressed in tailored clothes displaying class. The mother is the praised cook and unseen glue of the family, catering to needs ranging from cooking and cleaning to creative home repairs. The father is the breadwinner that orchestrates the day's activities while keeping everyone in line. Everyone has a role, everyone is happy. One image epitomizing this misconception is that of the whole family walking to mass every Sunday, followed by a drawn-out family dinner. If only it were all that simple.

Religious practices are one example of the false impressions Americans have of Italy, particularly small towns. Cagli may be a self-contained and self-reliant community, but it is still an evolving town. The romanticized view of Italians, whether they reside in the country or major cities, needs to be reexamined. Many of the same shifting values Americans have struggled to manage permeate this diminutive town wedged between three mountains.

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