Toronto Star

A taxi-driving Mary Poppins

- GAIA PIANIGIANI THE NEW YORK TIMES

The black-and-white checkered floor of the taxi looks a bit like home flooring. The seats are yellow, purple and orange leather, while the pea-green interiors are plastered with daisy stickers. When riding in the cab, passengers can play with plastic swords and a megaphone, or make soap bubbles. Welcome to Milano 25, the Florentine taxi that for 16 years has offered free travel, by day, between a pediatric hospital and the homes of young cancer patients — and, in the evening, carried regular clients around Tuscany’s main city.

Its soul and operator, Caterina Bellandi, 52, is better known in Florence and across the country as Zia Caterina (Auntie Caterina). She drives her Chrysler taxi wearing a flashy green-and-azure cloak topped by a straw top hat decorated with pompoms, and fabric roses and gerberas. An army of little bells sound at the movement of her wrists and of her necklace, a polkadot rosary of yellow, orange and red.

“This is not a show,” she said, looking in the rear mirror through her fluorescen­t glasses. Her warm smile was accented by her red lipstick. “My children may be sick, but they can and have to be happy.”

Bellandi’s partner, the original owner of Milano 25, died in 2001. His taxi licence was his legacy to her. “I found such a profound love in him and in his death that I decided to make his taxi live on,” she explained.

She surely succeeded. With a sense of style reminiscen­t of Mary Poppins, she and her taxi are one-of-akind. But her creative idea initially ran into city rules. Taxis usually look alike here, and hers carries unusual items, such as a stuffed figure of Disney’s dwarf Grumpy on the passenger seat. The local authoritie­s also objected to the pictures she glued to the windows, saying they could hamper the driver’s view. After getting multiple tickets, she complained vigorously.

“She is an extraordin­ary engine of solidarity and I felt her city should help her a little,” said Eugenio Giani, now president of Tuscany’s regional cabinet, who interceded for her with the municipal police.

He is planning to recognize Bellandi as “Tuscany’s Solidarity Ambassador,” an honorific title signalling the region’s institutio­nal backing.

Bellandi is not only a taxi driver for these young patients, but a friendly presence throughout these challengin­g moments of their lives. She visits families in their homes and arranges vacations. She takes sick children to watch soccer games and shake hands with their sports heroes and has even taken some to the Vatican to meet Pope Francis.

“I was desperate and I was looking for support,” said Francesca Scaturro, mother of Giulia, a 5-year-old who had an aggressive form of brain cancer. So she wrote an email to Bellandi’s website.

Bellandi showed up in style at the hospital where Giulia was being treated. She brought pizza with her and insisted that Scaturro, 34, have a slice.

“I thought pizza was a strange offer in that moment, but our condition was also strange,” Scaturro said.

Bellandi became a frequent presence during Giulia’s year of treatment, spending weekends with her and other families facing similar medical challenges, and even coming on a holiday in Sicily last summer.

She is now considered a family member, Scaturro said. Giulia calls her “Auntie.”

“It is enough just to see her,” Scaturro said. “Her hug is everything to me.”

 ?? NADIA SHIRA COHEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? For 16 years, Caterina Bellandi, or "Zia" (Auntie), has given young cancer patients free rides and uplifted their spirits.
NADIA SHIRA COHEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES For 16 years, Caterina Bellandi, or "Zia" (Auntie), has given young cancer patients free rides and uplifted their spirits.

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