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                                       Intro Mary Garden
                                       It's a Quiet Little Spot


How does your Mary Garden grow?

By Jeannie Marshall National Post October __, 1999 As she pokes around among her flowers, now past their prime but many still in bloom, Lauretta Santarossa fails to notice that it's raining. She has noticed in an aesthetic sense: "Look at how the water pearls up on the leaves of this Lady's Mantle," she says, and sinks to the wet ground to have a closer look. The fact that her clothes are becoming quite damp seems not to have crossed her mind. Santarossa's garden is a genuine passion for her, one which she has combined with another important aspect of her life: her Catholicism. Many Catholics express their religious devotion in a visual manner with pictures and statues of Christ, the saints and the Virgin Mary. Santarossa has adorned her Toronto home with a variety of depictions of Mary from all over the world. But she has also gone one step further in her veneration of Mary by creating a Mary Garden in her small city backyard: all the flowers are named for the Virgin Mary. "I would love to have a Japanese style garden, but I'm too Italian. I love colour," jokes Santarossa as she shifts wet vines along a fence to allow the few remaining Rose of Sharon blossoms more room. Santarossa, who has short red hair, gold-rimmed glasses and a face that scrunches up warmly and pleasingly every time she laughs, loves to garden but doesn't consider herself a great gardener. She started her Mary Garden about five years ago after talking with a landscape design student, who was doing some work at Santarossa's office, about redesigning her small, square, shady garden to make it more interesting. He knew of her Catholic background - she works for the Catholic publisher Novalis - and suggested she plant a Mary Garden. "I just thought, what a great idea. I knew the idea of the gardens because I had lived in a religious community called Madonna House where we had a file on Mary Gardens. They were really big in the 1950's," says Santarossa. Gardens in which all the flowers are named for the Virgin Mary are coming back in vogue She went to the Internet for more information and found a whole Web site devoted to the subject at www.mgardens.org. The site is run by John Stokes, who was one of the original missionaries of the Mary Garden in Pennsylvania in the 1950's. It offers an archive of articles written about Mary Gardens, about their origins as a medieval tradition, as well as a useful list of plants known as Mariana because their names symbolize God, the Virgin Mary, the angels and the saints. There are hundreds of such plants and most are common to any garden centre. Among them are Marigolds, which is really Mary's Gold, and Mayflower, which is Mary's Flower, or Thrift, which have small pink flowers and spikes and are known as Our Lady's Pin Cushion. Canterbury Bells are called Our Lady's Night Cap because they look like an old-fashioned nightcap, and Fuchsia is also known as Our Lady's Eardrops because the flowers resemble pendant earrings. "I'm always adding bulbs and in the spring there is a lot of colour. I try to have only a few of any one thing. I don't have a mass of anything because it's such a small garden and I like variety," says Santarossa. She pulls some leaves away from a small plant with spotted green leaves. "It's known as Mary's Milk. The legend is that when Mary nursed the infant Jesus on the road to Egypt some of her milk spilled onto this plant and it has been spotted with white ever since." The garden is square but everything is organized on a diagonal. There is a small, bricked-in space for a patio table. "I gathered all the bricks up from my neighbours. For some reason, everybody has bricks in their, backyard," she says. In the southeast corner of the yard is a small podium. At the moment, there is only a wrought iron garden ornament perched on it. But this will be the place for the icon of the Virgin once Santarossa can find one that pleases her. She has bought several already. "I have a Madonna from Italy that I like. She's kind of hokeylooking but nice, too. She's got a mantle and she looks to be protecting the people." The problem is that none of them seems quite right once she gets them into the garden. It's got to be just the right one, and in the meantime, her rooms are becoming full of images of Mary. There are brightly coloured wooden ones (can't take the elements), painted versions (also too delicate), primitive (too primitive) and modern (just doesn't work). Across from where the Madonna will eventually reside, Santarossa has placed a bench inlaid with beautiful stained glass. It is intended to be a meditation area. Santarossa has interested some friends in Mary Gardens. As yet, none of them have devoted their entire garden to the Virgin, but many have begun deliberately planting flowers that they know have a connection to Mary. "I think there is a revival of the Mary Garden," she says, because of the easy availability of information on the Internet and in the library. She has also been instrumental in helping the author of a book about Mary Gardens find a publisher. The book, Mary's Flowers Gardens, Legends and Meditations, by Vincenzina Krymow, is being published this fall (1999) by St. Anthony Messenger Press in the U.S. and by Novalis in Canada. Both are Catholic publishers. Mary Gardens tend to be formal because they often place Mary in the centre and then the flowers grow up all around her. But Santarossa wanted hers to be a little more free. "I like the formal and beautiful gardens but I like the artfulness of this. I just like the idea of making something beautiful," she says, explaining how inspiring she has found the shrines to Mary that people build by the roadside in parts of Europe. "Mary is a protector of the poor. She's like a mother. She's very positive. In the West we've made her pure and the Virgin and that's important, but for many people she's just more of a mother. She cares for Jesus and she will care for you,". says Santarossa. Then she rifles through her papers and files and says, "And there's just a big whack of information that you can find on her." Reprinted with permission.