This
year’s Christmas tree and Nativity scene in St. Peter’s Square will be
inaugurated and lit up on December 9th and will highlight several issues
such as care for the environment, the sick and migrants.
A communique
from the governing office of Vatican City said the 25 metre-high spruce
tree for 2016 will come from the region of Trentino in northern Italy
and when it’s cut down local school students will plant nearly 40 new
spruce and larch seedlings in a nearby area to replace trees suffering
from a parasite that had to be culled.
It said the tree will be adorned with handmade ornaments featuring
drawings made by children undergoing treatment for cancer and other
illnesses at several Italian hospitals.
Measuring 19 metres in width, this year’s giant Nativity scene will
feature 17 statues dressed in traditional Maltese costumes as well as a
replica of a traditional “Luzzu” Maltese boat.
In its communique, the Vatican City’s governing office said this boat
not only represents tradition: fish and life but also, unfortunately
the realities of migrants who in these same waters cross the sea on
makeshift boats to Italy.
Pope Francis will receive in audience on December 9th shortly before
the tree-lighting ceremony the designer of the Nativity scene, artist
Manwel Grech, representatives from Trent and Malta as well as several
children who designed the Christmas tree ornaments.
The lit-up tree will remain in St. Peter’s Square until the feast of the Lord’s Baptism on January 8th.