The St. Joseph Altar at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community in Santa Fe, New Mexico this March 2025.
A video of some of the photos and videos taken during the process of developing the St. Joseph Altar at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community in Santa Fe, New Mexico this March 2025.
The music starts out with a mariachi song and ends with an Italian tarantella, which highlights the blending of the two cultures that came together to make this fiesta a reality at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community.
A sincere thanks to all the parishioners at Santa Maria de la Paz who came together to help make this happen.
And to Fr. Darrell Segura for his guidance.
History of the St. Joseph Altar
The St. Joseph or San José Altar is Sicilian in origin.
During a terrible famine, the people of Sicily pleaded to St. Joseph, their patron saint, for relief. St. Joseph answered their prayers, and the famine ended. In gratitude, they prepared a table with foods they had harvested. After paying homage to St. Joseph, they distributed the food to the less fortunate. Each year an altar is prepared to celebrate St. Joseph's Feast Day on March 19th. The altar is usually a three-tier altar representing the Holy Trinity.
No meat is prepared for the Altar. This is probably because St. Joseph’s Feast falls in the Lenten Season and also because meat was a rarity to the Sicilian peasants.
Breads, cakes and cookies, baked in symbolic Christian shapes, are prepared for the Altar. Pastries in the shapes of monstrances, chalices, crosses, doves, lambs, fish, bibles, hearts, wreaths and palms adorn the tiers of the Altar. Symbols of St. Joseph – such as lilies, staffs, sandals, ladders, saws, hammers and nails – are also used.
There is symbolism in many of the items on the Altar. Breadcrumbs represent the sawdust of St. Joseph the Carpenter. Twelve whole fish represent the apostles. Wine is symbolic of the Miracle at Cana. The Altar is a medium of petition and thanksgiving. Petitions of the faithful are written on pieces of paper and placed in baskets on the Altar. Photos of deceased relatives & friends decorate the Altar as well. Visitors to St. Joseph Altars are given small bags containing a few blessed items from the Altar. The bags usually contain a holy card and a small medal. Various cookies or small breads may also be in the bag.
Reasons for having altars vary: to fulfill a promise, to give thanks for a favor granted, such as a safe return of a loved one from war, healing the sick, happy family, etc. It is also a time for the prosperous to share with those less fortunate.
The most interesting item found in the goodie bag is the fava bean. In Sicily, the fava was fodder for cattle. During a great famine the people resorted to eating them to survive. They were considered lucky to have favas to eat, hence the fava bean is also known as a “lucky bean.” Some believe that the pantry that contains a fava bean will never be bare. The fava, or lucky bean, serves as a token of the Altar – a reminder of God’s provisions through the intercession of St. Joseph.
Don’t leave without yours!