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Saint Sarah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saint Sarah

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the Gypsy saint. For other saints of that name, see Saint Sarah (disambiguation).

Saint Sarah, also known as Sara-la-Kali ("Sara the black", Sara e Kali in Romani), is the patron saint of the Roma (Gypsy) people. The center of her veneration is Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer, a place of pilgrimage for Roma in the Camargue, in southern France. Legend identifies her as the servant of one of the Three Marys, with whom she is supposed to have arrived in the Camargue.[1]

Contents

[edit] Accounts

Interior of the shrine of Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer
Interior of the shrine of Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer

According to various legends, during a persecution of early Christians, commonly placed in the year 42, Lazarus, his sisters Mary Magdalene and Martha, Mary Salome (the mother of the Apostles John and James), Mary Jacobe and Saint Maximin were sent out to sea in a boat. They arrived safely on the southern shore of Gaul at the place later called Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer. In some accounts Sarah, a native of Upper Egypt, appears as the black Egyptian maid of one of the Three Marys, usually Mary Jacobe.[2]

Though the tradition of the Three Marys arriving in France stems from the high middle ages, appearing for instance in the 13th century Golden Legend, Saint Sarah makes her first appearance in Vincent Philippon's book The Legend of the Saintes-Maries (1521), where she portrayed as "a charitable woman that helped people by collecting alms, which led to the popular belief that she was a Gypsy." Subsequently, Sarah was adopted by Roma as their saint.[3]

Another account has Sarah welcoming the Three Marys into Gaul. Franz de Ville (1956) writes:

One of our people who received the first Revelation was Sara the Kali. She was of noble birth and was chief of her tribe on the banks of the Rhône. She knew the secrets that had been transmitted to her... The Rom at that period practiced a polytheistic religion, and once a year they took out on their shoulders the statue of Ishtari (Astarte) and went into the sea to receive benediction there. One day Sara had visions which informed her that the Saints who had been present at the death of Jesus would come, and that she must help them. Sara saw them arrive in a boat. The sea was rough, and the boat threatened to founder. Mary Salome threw her cloak on the waves and, using it as a raft, Sarah floated towards the Saints and helped them reach land by praying.[4]

[edit] Pilgrimage

The day of the pilgrimage honouring Sarah is May 24; her statue is carried down to the sea on this day to re-enact her arrival in France. Roma participation in pilgrimage and their veneration of Saint Sarah has been recorded since the middle of the 19th century by travellers and parish priests.[5]

Some authors have drawn parallels between the ceremonies of the pilgrimage and the worship of the Indian goddess Kali, subsequently identifying the two.[6] Ronald Lee (2001) states:

If we compare the ceremonies with those performed in France at the shrine of Sainte Sara (called Sara e Kali in Romani), we become aware that the worship of Kali/Durga/Sara has been transferred to a Christian figure... in France, to a non-existent "sainte" called Sara, who is actually part of the Kali/Durga/Sara worship among certain groups in India.[7]

Walter Weyrauch (2001) notes that,

The ceremony in Saintes-Maries closely parallels the annual processions in India, the country in which the Romani originated, when statues of the Indian goddess Durga, also named Kali, are immersed into water. Durga, the consort of Shiva, usually represented with a black face, is the goddess of creation, sickness and death.[8]

[edit] Cultural references

  • The statue of Saint Sarah makes an appearance in Tony Gatlif's 1993 film Latcho Drom (Safe Journey) where it is carried to the sea, and her landing is re-enacted.

[edit] In popular culture

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Bart McDowell, Gypsies: Wanderers of the World, p. 38-57.
  2. ^ Michal Droit, Carmague, p. 19.
  3. ^ Myths & Traditions of Gypsies - Romany Mythology
  4. ^ Franz de Ville, Traditions of the Roma in Belgium.
  5. ^ Jarmila Balazova, Religion among the Roma
  6. ^ Isabel Fonseca, Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and Their Journey, p. 106-107.
  7. ^ Ronald Lee, "The Rom-Vlach Gypsies and the Kris-Romani", p. 210.
  8. ^ Walter Weyrauch, "Oral Legal Traditions of Gypsies", p. 262.
  9. ^ Margaret Starbird, The Woman with the Alabaster Jar: Mary Magdalen and the Holy Grail, Bear & Company, 1993.
  10. ^ Fida Hassnain, A Search for the Historical Jesus (Gateway Books, 1994).
  11. ^ Marilyn Hopkins, Graham Simmans, Tim Wallace-Murphy, Rex Deus. The True Mystery of Rennes-le-Château and the Dynasty of Jesus, Element Books, 2000. ISBN 86204 472 4.
  12. ^ The Real Da Vinci Code, Channel Four Television, transmitted on 3 February 2005.
  13. ^ Behind The Mysteries: Unlocking Da Vinci's Code - The Full Story, National Geographic Channel, transmitted on 19 December 2004.

[edit] References

  • de Ville, Franz, Traditions of the Roma in Belgium, Brussels, 1956.
  • Droit, Michel, Carmague. Ernest and Adair Heimann (trans.). London: George Allen and Unwin, 1963.
  • Fonseca, Isabel, Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and Their Journey. New York: Knopf, 1996.
  • Kinsley, David R. Hindu Goddesses: Visions of the Divine Feminine in the Hindu Religious Tradition.' Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.
  • Lee, Ronald, "The Rom-Vlach Gypsies and the Kris-Romani", in: Walter Weyrauch (ed.), Gypsy Law: Romani Legal Traditions and Culture, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001.
  • McDowell, Bart, Gypsies: Wanderers of the World', Washington: National Geographic Society, 1970.
  • Weyrauch, Walter, "Oral Legal Traditions of Gypsies", in: Walter Weyrauch (ed.), Gypsy Law: Romani Legal Traditions and Culture, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001.

[edit] External links


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