Toronto Star

Take home piece of Rome’s mangy tree

Ridiculed Christmas tree will be carved up and sold as souvenirs, city officials say

- NICOLE WINFIELD

Rome’s pathetic Christmas tree, so droopy and dried out that residents nicknamed it “The Mangy One,” will be carved up and turned into souvenirs and a lactation hut for mothers, city officials said Tuesday.

In giving the downtrodde­n tree a new life, Rome’s cabinet moved to close an embarrassi­ng chapter in which the holiday decoration came to symbolize the city’s degradatio­n and dysfunctio­n under its mayor, Virginia Raggi, and the years of neglect and corruption before her.

Raggi insisted that the tree ended up capturing the hearts of Romans and visitors alike, and that its future would show Rome as a model of recycling. But not even its removal went as planned. Workers on cranes started taking down ornaments Tuesday, only to put them back after getting word that a formal farewell ceremony was planned for Thursday.

The 21-metre-high tree, which was lit on Dec. 8, earned its moniker soon after it was hoisted up in the middle of Rome’s main square, Piazza Venezia, and started dropping its needles at an unusually fast clip.

Raggi ordered an investigat­ion into why the needles fell off so soon, given the tree was alive when it was selected and cost € 48,000 euros ($71,400) to transport from South Tyrol, an Italian Alpine region, to the capital.

The “Spelacchio” saga was the latest headache for Raggi, who was recently indicted on charges she lied about a city hall appointmen­t. The trial is due to start in June. Raggi says she’s innocent. The case involves the appointmen­t of Renato Marra as director of Rome’s tourism department. Marra’s brother, Raffaele Marra, headed city hall’s personnel office until his arrest in an unrelated corruption probe. Raggi has said she alone decided on the tourism appointmen­t, but text messages indicate Raffaele Marra had a hand in both it and the resulting salary increase for his brother.

 ?? ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A worker removes the star decoration on top of the Christmas tree of the city of Rome known as the “Spelacchio” (which translates as “Mangy” or “Baldy”) Tuesday in Piazza Venezia in Rome.
ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A worker removes the star decoration on top of the Christmas tree of the city of Rome known as the “Spelacchio” (which translates as “Mangy” or “Baldy”) Tuesday in Piazza Venezia in Rome.

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