Snakes paraded in Italy at village religious feast | Inquirer News

Snakes paraded in Italy at village religious feast

/ 06:41 PM May 03, 2014

COCULLO—Dozens of snakes were paraded during a traditional May Day religious celebration in the Italian village of Cocullo in the Apennine Mountains on Thursday.

Dozens of snakes were brought out for a traditional May Day religious celebration in the Italian village of Cocullo in the Apennine Mountains on Thursday. AFP

Thirty non-venomous snakes were draped onto a statue of Saint Dominic in the yearly ritual to celebrate the saint’s supposed healing powers.

The statue was then paraded around a town square packed with thousands of people, where some held up more snakes captured in the weeks preceding the rite.

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The Feast of the Snake Catchers traces its origins back to pre-Christian history and celebrates the skill of those who can find the snakes after the snows melt in spring.

The reptiles — mostly Four-Lined or Green Whip snakes — are fattened up with a diet of live mice and eggs and are then released back into the wild after the celebration.

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TAGS: Beliefs, Celebration, Cocullo, Italy, Religion, Snake

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