Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Statue kept decades in Philly closet sent to Italian church

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PHILADELPH­IA » A nearly life-sized statue missing for decades from an Italian church is being returned by an American couple who finally solved the mystery of their family’S odd relic.

Ed Nader told NewsWorks the statue of St. Pantaleon, considered the patron saint of physicians, spent years in his great-grandmothe­r’s closet.

He recently discovered that it actually belonged to the church in Montauro, Italy, so Nader agreed to return it.

The statue of the saint bound to a tree came to the U.S. in 1946 when a group of Montauro parishione­rs brought it to Boston for a feast day parade, Nader said. For some reason, they left it with his great-grandmothe­r in Philadelph­ia and never returned to retrieve it.

She kept it in a walk-in closet on the third story of her lit candles at its base.

“As kids, every time we went to the third floor to go to the bathroom, we’d run past that room,” Nader said. “We were so frightened of that statue. My mother, me, my aunt, her children, my children.”

When Nader’s great-grandmothe­r died, the statue moved with him to Exton, where his wife kept it hidden under a sheet in the den. rowhome and

 ?? EMMA LEE — WHYY VIA AP ?? In this photo provided by WHYY, Ed and Kathleen Nader stand in their living room in Exton, Pa, with a statue of St. Pantaleon that has been in Ed’s family for four generation­s. The nearly life-sized statue missing for decades from an Italian church is...
EMMA LEE — WHYY VIA AP In this photo provided by WHYY, Ed and Kathleen Nader stand in their living room in Exton, Pa, with a statue of St. Pantaleon that has been in Ed’s family for four generation­s. The nearly life-sized statue missing for decades from an Italian church is...

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