Sicily is Italy at its extreme
This island may have changed in recent years, but it’s still Italy at its most extreme
In addition to the wine, the food is what nearly all visitors rave about. The cuisine is Mediterranean and rich in seafood. Along with pasta, you may see couscous on the menu — a reminder that this island is just 160 kilometres from Tunisia.
While part of Italy, Sicily really is a world apart.
Midway between Africa and Europe in the middle of the Mediterranean, over the past 2,500 years it has been ruled by Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Normans, and Spaniards. Its complicated past makes it distinct — with spicier food, a more festive lifestyle, and people who are Sicilian first, Italian second. Italian-Americans have a special bond with the island — almost onethird of all Italians who arrived in the U.S. between 1880 and 1930 were from Sicily.
This past spring, I found Sicily had changed quite a bit since my last visit.
Years ago, I considered Palermo, the capital city, seedy and sketchy. My latest visit, however, demolished my lingering Mafia images. The city is still gritty and colourful … yet its bustling centre feels safe and trendy. Quattro Canti, the fountain-filled intersection of Palermo’s two main thoroughfares, is a fine focal point to a pedestrian area where people enjoy their evening passeggiata. As I strolled, I found that thriving marketplaces abound in the morning and squares in nearly every neighbourhood are lively and inviting after dark.
The Cathedral of Monreale ( just outside of Palermo), one of Sicily’s greatest art treasures, is something that hasn’t changed. While dedicated to the Virgin Mary, this massive church was built to show off the power of the Norman King William II. Famous for its exquisite 12th- and 13th-century mosaics, each panel tells a story: Adam and Eve being tempted by the serpent, angels climbing Jacob’s ladder, and Noah building his ark.
Palermo also offers a great “bone” experience — skull and shoulders above anything else you’ll find in Europe. Its Capuchin crypt is a subterranean gallery filled with 8,000 “bodies without souls.” For centuries, people would line up to be “not buried” here. They’d actually choose their niche in death and even stand there getting to know their macabre neighbourhood. Then, when they died, dressed in their Sunday best, this is where they’d end up.
On this year’s trip, I made a point of exploring the entire island. On the west coast, I sailed through salt flats and across a lagoon to the humble little island of Mozia. This salt-making region was a Carthaginian stronghold centuries before Christ, and you can still see Carthaginian ruins amid Roman ruins: Here, like elsewhere on the island, you’ll enjoy many layers of history.
Near Sicily’s south coast is Agrigento, with its “Valley of the Temples” — the largest, best-preserved collection of ancient Greek buildings outside of Greece. Its top temple rivals the Parthenon — not a surprise, since Agrigento was one of the richest Greek colonies and a thriving democracy 2,500 years ago.
One of Sicily’s most famous sites is Taormina, a spectacular resort city on the east coast. Hanging high above the sea, with handy cable car access to the beach, it’s long been the island’s romantic cliffside haunt of aristocrats at play. Taormina’s setting impressed the ancient Greeks — probably more for its strategic location than the view. Its Greek-Roman theatre must be the most dramatically situated theatre from the ancient world — and it still hosts open-air concerts. (Paul Simon, Tony Bennett and Elton John have performed here.)
Nearby looms Mount Etna — at 3,329 metres, it’s Europe’s biggest volcano. It’s anything but extinct; a serious eruption comes about every three years. On my visit, a gondola swept me up into a barren land of spent lava flows. At the edge of the volcano, I surveyed the landscape: The flows seemed to rumble like big black buffalo toward Sicily’s teeming second city, Catania. In the distance, a crescent beach stretched all the way to Taormina. And to my right was the hazy, high, and harsh interior. In a vineyard on the slopes of this steaming volcano, I was served a glass of fullbodied red wine by a woman who could have been Sophia Loren’s younger cousin.
In addition to the wine, the food is what nearly all visitors rave about. The cuisine is Mediterranean and rich in seafood. Along with pasta, you may see couscous on the menu — a reminder that this island is just 160 kilometres from Tunisia.
And for dessert: cannoli, which tastes best here in its homeland. Connoisseurs of cannoli insist on having one freshly filled — not with cream, but with sweetened ricotta cheese. I now know why they say, “Holy cannoli.”
Sicily — with a culture enriched by wave after wave of conquerors — is one of Europe’s most fascinating corners.
I think of Sicily as “Italy in the extreme” — if you like Italy for its people, tempo, and joy of living, you’ll love Sicily.