Arab News

Italians are no longer singing on their balconies

COVID-19 death toll mounts and the lockdown continues

- Francesco Bonggara Rome

As Italians adjusted to life under quarantine, 6 p.m. had become the highlight of the day for many. Every day, people would take to their balconies and rooftops to take part in a “musical flash mob” aimed at lifting people’s spirits.

But as the national lockdown due to the coronaviru­s pandemic is set to go on at least until Easter, if not longer, Italians are no longer singing.

In the early days of the lockdown, the idea of a daily musical flash mob was a hit across the country. Day after day, right before sunset, people would open their windows, put out a national flag and start singing as loudly as possible.

Social media was quickly filled with videos of people singing from their windows and playing tambourine­s on their balconies nationwide.

Even Lombardy, the region with the highest number of infections and fatalities, joined in enthusiast­ically.

Some musicians put powerful loudspeake­rs on their balconies and performed concerts. Every daily performanc­e was opened by the national anthem, followed by well-known Italian songs.

Musical competency was not a requiremen­t, nor was possessing an instrument. A pot or wooden spoon could suffice. A recording made in the city of Siena has been viewed more than 600,000 times on Twitter.

Italian singer Andrea Sannino made a compilatio­n on his Instagram feed that shows people singing his song “Abbracciam­e” (“Embrace Me”) in his hometown Naples.

Placards

The 1990s song “Grazie Roma,” with the lyric “tell me what it is that makes us feel like we’re together, even when we’re apart,” is also popular online.

Quieter neighbors had been using social media to encourage Italians to put up placards on their homes that read “andra tutto bene” (“everything will be OK”), accompanie­d by a picture of a rainbow. Everyone seemed happy to let off steam while effectivel­y living under house arrest. “Music has provided unity in times of division throughout history; now Italians are showing the world that, if only for a moment, it can also help them transcend the anxiety brought by a pandemic,” said sociologis­t Bruno de Masi.

But as the death toll rose and restrictio­ns remained, people stopped joining the flash mobs. Now, if one sings, they might be interrupte­d by somebody shouting “smettila, vai a casa” (“stop it and go home”). Meanwhile, social unrest is mounting, especially in the poorer south.

“They’re no longer singing or dancing on the balconies. Now people are more afraid, not so much of the virus but of poverty,” Salvatore Melluso, a priest at Caritas Diocesana di Napoli, a church-run charity in Naples, told Arab News.

 ?? Reuters ?? A medical staff member looks on while a patient is carried on a stretcher as he arrives at a hospital on Monday, as the spread of COVID-19 continues in Rome.
Reuters A medical staff member looks on while a patient is carried on a stretcher as he arrives at a hospital on Monday, as the spread of COVID-19 continues in Rome.

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