The Jewish Chronicle

Fascist resurgence feared as Italy goes to polls

- BY ROSSELA TERCATIN IN ROME

TENS OF thousands of people gathered in Italy’s capital on Saturday, barely a week before the country’s general election, to march against fascism and racism.

The demonstrat­ion, backed by the Jewish umbrella group UCEI, was a show of solidarity against extremism in an election campaign that has been marred by episodes of intoleranc­e and hatred.

The angry rhetoric culminated at the beginning of this month in a shooting incident in the city of Macerata, where Luca Traini, a 28-year-old who previously ran as a candidate for the right-wing Northern League, shot several African immigrants in the streets, injuring six people.

The act was condemned by Northern League leader Matteo Salvini. But in distancing himself from the shooter, Mr Salvini — who has claimed Italy’s fascist regime under Benito Mussolini also did “good things” — blamed “those who fill Italy with illegal immigrants”.

His view that fascist and racist attitudes no longer exist in Italy is shared by more mainstream politician­s, including the centre-right Forza Italia under Silvio Berlusconi and the nationalis­t Fratelli d’Italia, led by Giorgia Meloni. Both parties joined members of the populist Five Star Movement in parliament last year to oppose a law that would have introduced harsher measures to combat fascist propaganda. For many Italian Jewish leaders and intellectu­als, there has been a reawakenin­g of intoleranc­e in Italy. Historian Anna Foa has pointed out that 2018 was the eightieth anniversar­y of the country’s racial laws, which codified discrimina­tion against Italian Jews. “[This] culture of race was the scenario that allowed the discrimina­tion and eventually the persecutio­n and annihilati­on of Jews,” she said at a ceremony to mark Holocaust Memorial Day last month.

Jews were excluded from public office and university education under the first laws introduced in 1938, on the eve of the Second World War. Further measures stripped Italian Jews of their assets and interned them. But in recent years, most Italian Jews have supported right wing parties. In a 2012 study, 39 per cent said they felt most comfortabl­e with the right or centre right. A quarter said “no one”; just 15 pe cent supported the left.

Italy has undergone substantia­l political upheaval with three left-leaning government­s since 2013. One was led by Matteo Renzi, who built strong ties with Italy’s Jewish communitie­s by making the fight against antisemiti­sm a priority.

The biggest game-changer has been the advent of Five Star, but any Jewish supporters are hard to track down, perhaps because the party’s politician­s appeared to lack any empathy on issues like Holocaust remembranc­e.

The mayor of Rome, Virginia Raggi, for example, did not attend the funeral in 2016 of Settimio Piattelli, one of the city’s last Shoah survivors, or even send a representa­tive. It took her two days to tweet condolence­s to the family and the Jewish community — and when she did, she used a photograph of someone else.

On Tuesday, the movement’s candi- date for prime minister Luigi Di Maio announced his choice for Economic Developmen­t minister would be Lorenzo Fioramonti, a staunch supporter of BDS.

The latest polls suggest Five Star will win the most votes in Sunday’s election, but this does not guarantee power under Italy’s complicate­d election rules.

But the possibilit­y of a government led by Mr Di Maio is sufficient to worry many in the Jewish community.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Thousands demonstrat­ed against fascism in Palermo on Sunday
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Thousands demonstrat­ed against fascism in Palermo on Sunday
 ??  ?? Lorenzo Fioramonti
Lorenzo Fioramonti

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