Today we celebrate the feast of the birthday of
the Blessed Mother. She was conceived in St Anne’s womb on December 8th, the
feast of the Immaculate Conception, and to follow the duration of a human
pregnancy, the church celebrates her birth date today. Many countries,
including Italy and Spain as well as Malta celebrate this holy day with images
and statues of the baby Mary, although the statues venerated in Malta are that
of a young girl, all of which known as Maria Bambina (the little child Mary.) Th image of the statue shown above is
the one at Naxxar parish, where I serve Mass regularly, and the other photo
shows the church decorated at its finest today. The feast
of the Nativity of Mry started in the 5th century when a basilica was built in
Jerusalem where St Anne and St
Joachim lived and where Mary was born, traditionally
around 12 BC. Saints Joachim and Anne have their own feast on July 26, but
today we honor Mary’s birthday. Imagine the joy to see this little girl being
born, in the obscurity of her town, with no Angels, no shepherds, no Kings, but
that’s because she didn’t want to take the attention from her Son, who would be
born 16 years later.
In Malta we also commemorate the occasion of
two major victories at war. The first one was the victory of the Maltese and
the Knights of Malta against the Turks, the Ottoman Empire in 1565, and the
second one was the end of Fascism and Nazism at the height of World War II, a
time of terrible suffering for the Maltese people. Unfortunately, because of Covid, no processions
will be held today in the 4 parishes that celebrate the Nativity of Mary,
Naxxar, Mellieħa, Senglea and Xagħra in Gozo, but celebrations inside the churches
are held with the usual pomp and reverence.
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